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A88417 England faithfully watcht with, in her wounds: or, Christ as a father sitting up with his children in their swooning state: which is the summe of severall lecvtures painfully preached upon Colossians 1. / By Nicho. Lockyer, M.A. Published according to order. Lockyer, Nicholas, 1611-1685. 1646 (1646) Wing L2794; Thomason E321_1; ESTC R200573 432,053 511

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the learned render that Greek word as noting a joynt act two speaking together with one mouth to wit the Father and the holy Ghost which is a most acute translation Christ had not onely his ordination by joynt protestation but by oath What a man is invested with by word from the kings own mouth is very noble the word of a king hath a great state in it but the oath of a king added makes double and treble majesty yet so is Christ invested with his Priestly office The Lord hath sworn and will not repent Thou art a Priest for ever As Christs Priestly ordination was princely so his tabernacle in which he officiates princely it is as stately as heaven Christ doth officiate his princely office in heaven which was shadowed out by Aarons officiating in the inward court in the most holy place yearly We have such an high priest which is set on the throne in the majestie in the heavens Hebr. 8.1 A minister of the Sanctuary and of the true tabernacle Christ hath upon his mitre a crown in heaven and he sits upon a throne of state at the right hand of God as a princely Priest sacrificing in a princely tabernacle sprinkling the mercy-seat where offended justice himself fits to make all communication to man Aarons tabernacle the Apostle calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 umbra a shadow as rather the shadow of a tabernacle then indeed a tabernacle then a true tabernacle a house of boughs a leafie house Christ is minister of the true tabernacle There was gold and state in the first tabernacle but it was all but painting as it were in the tabernacle where Christ sacrifices there is true state the gold that is in heaven is true gold the golden censer that is there is true gold the golden altar that is there is true gold Truth is the principality of things such is Christs tabernacle 't is as true as heaven Christ hath his tabernacle as he hath ordination after a very immediate and a very stately way Aarons tabernacle was pitched by man bur Christs by God himself He is a minister of the true tabernacle which the Lord hath pitch'd and not man Aarons tabernacle was pitch'd with hands and made with hands but Christ is a high Priest in a more perfect tabernacle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not of this creation of another creation and of another fixation Christs sacrifice is noble and princely as well as the tabernacle he offers like a Prince royall bloud not the bloud of bulls and goats which is bruitish bloud but his own bloud Neither by the bloud of goats and calves but by his own bloud he entred in once into the holy place c. Life is a noble thing you have not such another jewell about you but a spotlesse life is doubly noble such bloud did Christ offer Life is a jewell in which all is wrapt up a man offers all when he offers this and that 's a noble offering indeed The widow threw in all which was a noble offering so hath Christ 'T is noble action for a great Peere to take his life in his hand and say This shall go for my kingdome Christ is the greatest Peere that ever the world saw and yet he took his life in his hand and said This shall go for my kingdome and my people I lay down my life for my sheep If Christ had laid down the life of all creatures for man it had been a noble sacrifice but he saith I lay down my life and then tell me what nobility is in this offering Judas valued this bloud basely but God that values things as they are takes it of more price then all your souls and yet every one of which is of more price then the world Christ doth officiate a very noble covenant he offers faultlesse bloud and he officiates a faultlesse covenant The covenant which Aaron did officiate was faulty not faulty in it self but weak through the flesh it was a covenant in the externall dispensation of it so fleshly that frail flesh could see little of Christ to better it self Christ hath obtained a more excellent ministery the way into the holiest of all is now via propalata spread open ministration is clear and things ministred full the laws are opened unto our eyes and given into our hearts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Every thing about Christs priesthood is noble so is his prosecution The priests under the Law had their ignorances their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 errata's and therefore were to sacrifice for themselves as well as for others but Christ had none he did all things well he did live well and die well when he offered up that great sacrifice he did it perfectly Christ spake truth when he looked over all his works and said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is perfected all sides give testimony of the noble discharge of Christs office God smileth to look upon him and our conscience smileth assoon as it can look upon him he maketh the worshipper perfect as pertaining to the conscience Christ scarlet garment takes heaven and earth God and his people Who is this that comes from Edom with garments died red from Bozra c. That expression may be applied either to the Father admiring the Son or the Churches admiring of him Use You see what a complete Priest what a Prince-priest you have and what use do you make of him You cannot come to the Father without Christ his Priestly office is absolutely necessary to life Your duties fall short of heaven and so will your souls if you think that these shall bring them thither my heart bleeds to see how some ignorant persons labour much to bring all to nothing make hard at heaven and yet live in hell They have their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 justices of worship as the Apostle speaks of those legall Christians and justices of the flesh as he elsewhere speaks they fast and pray and are very just and exact in houres and times and all externall observance and yet like the young man at their wits end every foot about their eternall condition they run to one preacher and to another Good Sir What shall I do to be saved I am a damned man They are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as he calls them there which comes from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies to tremble trembling worshippers to do all exact and yet their conscience shakes as if hell were at the doore to receive them assoon as they have done their duties Their justices of worship and justices of the flesh their exactnesse according to the letter make them not perfect as concerning their conscience they pray no more they give no more and yet full of fear and none more they run to this minister and that Sir I fear all is naught And so do I too for thou makest no use of the Priestly office of Christ thou dost not put thy self and all thou doest into the hand of a
crooked and perverse and this makes him mad and this is Gods way of whipping his bedlams those that are out of their wits against truth and holinesse One calls for morter and the other brings stones the proud Babel will not up did not that vex and torture them think you The great God and great-spirited men meet sometimes and they justle and he justles and crouds their limbs against the wall and that maddes them to the heart Frustration of intention and disprosperity of action you cannot find out a worse hell for a proud man and yet thus God dealeth usually with such spirits God opposeth will to will and what men say shall be God saith it shall not be he sets himself to walk contrarie to them which walk contrary to him and this makes weeping and gnashing of teeth indeed amongst wilfull wretches Can you imagine how this scourges wretches on the kings side that God crosses their will in all things David pleased not Saul Jonathan pleased not Saul God pleased not Saul because none pleased his will this was an evil spirit vexing him continually 'T is the portion of all spirits more or lesse which are pinned to their will they are vexed with an evill spirit of discontent perpetually Continuall raging enrageth God and then he reveals his will and then devils descend to hell which is their place all fiery spirits are put in a room together Let wilfull wretches stoop to the will of God which is the use that Solomon makes of this point Stand not in an evil thing for he doth whatsoever pleaseth him Eccles 8.3 He speaks it in regard of the king how much more true is it of the King of kings That we do evil is not simply damnable but that we stand in it There must be but one God one to rule by will when we make more then we pay for it As God makes his will his rule in all things so do you make his will your rule in all things and not your own Mine own heart is deceitfull 't is an ill guide Sathan can get favour in every court here below not a heart upon earth but he finds something in it when he comes to welcome him 't is dangerous to make this generall commander of a mans military life in this world which holds such correspondencie with such a deadly enemy O that men would thus wisely consider their way and do like disciples of Christ that have denied themselves and not like heady persons that have sould themselves to do wickedly Poore creatures think that there is but one step to felicitie and that is to have their will in this thing or that O if I had this or if I had that what a blessed creature should I be whereas our felicity is not in having our own will from God but in Gods having his own will from us our blessednesse is not in our selves but in him not in any thing that we propose but in what he proposeth 'T is our meat and drink to do Gods will 'T is our felicity to rise dayly to the life of Christ who pleaseth not himself For even Christ pleaseth not himself but as it is written the reproches of them that reproched thee fell on me Romans 15.3 A word of consolation and I have done Some favours are long a coming and then we are sad it should not be for they come as soon as God will and sooner would not be well for us Some persons are very bitter in their carriage this makes others concerned therein to weep bitterly it should not be no creature is bitterer to me then God will the cup of gall and vinegar in Christs hand is Gods will Father thy will be done Men are strong devils are strong lusts are strong and I think they shall never down and this throws me down but it should not be for though I cannot throw these down God will he wills the death of sinners when past remedie and he wills the death of sinnes when past our strength and that he wills this is enough I will be thou clean That God shapes out every thing by his will makes ill for sinners for wilful sinners but very well for such as are humble and penitent COLOSSIANS 1.19 It pleaseth the Father c. AS this terme involves the will of God simply and singly considered so I pursued it the last day 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it notes something deare or complacentiall to us and so rendred 1 Thes 2.8 the word also comprehends the strength and intention of affection such a complacencie of love as makes one delight and rest to doe such or such a thing It gave rest to Father and holy Ghost it delighted both to lay out liberally in Christ for fallen mans reliefe Fire hath its propertie which is to burne so doth love in Gods breast to us-ward Wee are now led to speake upon the propertie of mercy how strongly the rivers and streames of life run God is restlesse till befallen man have full reliefe provided Doctr. It gave rest to the Father c. What agents doe naturally they doe it intensly the Sun is restlesse till it rise and shine upon us 'T is naturall to God to shew mercy as 't is to the Sun to shine according to this he wrought as soone as ever he began to worke and could not tell how to worke otherwise God could not tell how to make any thing but blessed creatures and blessed places a Heaven and a Paradise blessed spirits and blessed men God cast all that ever he did into a frame full of mercy but man jogd his hand and turned all out of course God is the same stil restless til all be brought into a state of blessednesse againe As the Needle is restlesse till it stand to the North point so was God till he turned againe to fallen man as may appeare by his speedy provision for Adam God eyes the beautie of action motion with delight unto good is glorious Delight is love in strength love in strength is restlesse till it can vend it selfe Since I spake against him I doe earnestly remember him still Jere. 31.20 Earnest affection makes mind worke memory worke head worke heart worke still it makes all restlesse perpetually till the thing pitied and beloved have rest God goes reluctantly about no act of kindnesse 't is inglorious it may be competent to you it cannot be to God 'T is below God to shew kindnesse to us here reluctantly though wee be all here such base creatures God delights to exercise loving kindnesse in the earth Jerem 9.24 One would thinke that it might be delightfull to him to shine in his owne spheare to exercise loving kindnesse in Heaven to cast pearles and raies upon those noble peeres and so 't is and 't is delightfull also to the Sunne to shine upon dunghils upon us base creatures to exercise loving kindnesse in the earth God eyes the necessitie of action unlesse he acts throughly wee are all
ruine of all will be charged upon you Know the symptome of a dying State when death is seized upon the vitals and blacke vapours beat up strong against the braine we cry draw the curtaines shut the windows keep them darke they will be mad else Light is scoft at now never more this makes thousands cry draw the curtaine shut the windows keepe soules darke they will be mad else and this is the glory of thousands that they keep where they were and shut out light it is I feare a deadly state Mayst not thou come as far short of truth as thou judgest others to overshoot themselves Dost thou thinke that none hit the white but thee Are not errors on the left hand as dangerous as errors on the right Is not a cold frozen soule a soule setled upon its lees as base a prizer of the Gospel as a wanton that is too lavish I have but one thing more let love be returned Doth God give grand favours returne answerable to him The light which shines sweetly and gloriously upon you let it gaine your soules to God Doth Christ speake kindly unto you Speake so to him Doth Christ speake for your hearts to lay them in his bosome and for no other use How can you deny him Give Christ your heart 't is no great favour yet Christ accounts it so because 't is your prime jewel Christ doth take things according to your account which is transcendent love what you account your jewel that Christ takes for one If you make a sin a jewel dearer then any thing yet if at the call of the Gospel you sacrifice this and offer it to Christ to doe what he will with it kill it or keepe it alive he accounts this for a great favour a jewel What you indeed and in good earnest account great that doth Christ when in plainnesse and in simplicitie you give it to him Isaac was esteemed by Abraham a great favour from God and when he was willing to offer this againe to God 't was taken by God as Abraham accounted it a great favour The Sunne loses none of its rayes by all the course it runs none darkened nor spoyled but sets as big as glorious and as smiling as it did arise Shall wee darken any beame of that light which shines upon us Shall we sad the face of that Sunne that smiles upon us And yet so wee doe when Christ cannot gaine us by his beames of love which shine upon us Consider how long time the Gospel hath been amongst you and how little good it hath done O that a heart should be so cold that twenty or thirty yeares lying in the Sunne will not warme it Hold a multiplying glasse upon the Sunne that shines upon your soules and see what this will doe say to thy soul How many precious Gospel-Sermons have I heard and how many thousand thousand secret words in them how have these ecchoed with a sweeter report from one within then they were at first speaking from the person without which delivered them how many sweet Gospel-words yea how many sweet Gospel-workes have I had how many heart-liftings heaven-ward and yet downe againe Hath any body such a cold heavie heart as I 'T is good to complaine of ones heart much for its badnesse to him that can make it better 't is good to complaine much of this badnesse badnesse under goodnesse prime goodnesse badnesse under the Gospel Cold-hearted sinners thus taber upon your breast when you are alone if any thing warme 't is well if nothing will draw the curtaine and take leave of friends if the Sun-shine of the Gospel can by no meanes fetch heat in thee thou canst not live long if thou wouldst give all the wealth thou hast the fruit of the body for the sin of the soule COLOS. 1.23 Which was preached to every creature BY creature here is meant the noblest creature to wit man 't is an expression borrowed from Christ the creator Goe and preach the Gospel to every creature Mark 16.15 i to all men make no distinction of persons nor Nations goe into every house Jew Gentile and proffer peace tender life unto every dying soule The expression in hand speakes of this as done wherein lies the difficultie Which was preached to every creature An expression like unto this you have at the sixt verse of this Chapter Which is come unto you as it is unto all the world These compared explaine one another By the coming of Christ the wall of partition between Jew and Gentile was broken down and their priviledges made common for any and according to this tenor was the preaching of the Gospel so that the tenor of Grace inlarged and generally dispensed to all sorts of persons Jew and Gentile is said to be the preaching of the Gospel to every creature Besides there may be more in the expression though there was not in the Apostles time an actuall tender to every individuall person under Heaven by preaching which elsewhere seemes to be prophesied shall be yet the sound of that grace which was thus generally preached went into all the earth and so their words at second hand unto the ends of the world Have they not heard Yes their sound went into all the earth and their words unto the end of the world Rom. 10.18 which makes the meaning of the expression in more words to this sense Which was divulged in the tenor of it for all and in the rumor of it to all Doctr. Mercy now is of very vast extent God is no respecter of persons nor respecter of nations David becoms a leader of all sorts every one that was in distresse and every one that was discontented c. 1 Sam. 22.2 Saving grace hath a universality in it Look to me and be saved all the ends of the earth The brazen Serpent was lifted up in the Wildernesse to be looked upon it did secretly hint to that unworthy people that God would not alwayes tie himself to them but give mercy a larger compasse that not only Israel but those that were dogs and as the brutes of the Wildernesse should have a Saviour lifted up among them to look upon our Saviour in his own expression gives this explanation When I am lifted up I will draw all men unto me not only Jews but Gentiles The Serpent that is now lifted up Lions Tigers Bears Wolves all the beasts of the vast Wildernesse of this world from the one end to the other may look upon Look to me and be saved all the ends of the earth Mercy is proportion'd to Misery All flesh hath corrupted it self and Christ hath power over all flesh to give eternall life to whom he will not a soul so black so speckled but Christ can cleanse him as white as snow no sin no evill spirit so strong but he can bring him under he is able to subdue all things to himself men devils sins c. he shall change your vile bodies and make them
brave spirits in his bloud and trades them out all for Christ and Heaven in long voyages to come home rich he hath no hand but to good but to this he hath hand and heart and nothing can fetch off either Then answered I thus and said The God of Heaven will prosper us therefore we his servants will arise and build but you have no portion nor right nor memoriall in Jerusalem Nehem. 2.20 A Christian indeed magnanimous hath truth in one hand and life in the other and this is his Motto Take one take both This is his Motto every where in libertie in bonds and this he speakes and smiles now I joy Vse Wee are put by providence to speake upon a seasonable subject times call us to move bravely every one in our place Furie is abroad and furie is at home nothing but a brave spirit can now kisse Christ and smile in the face of both Greatnesse will over-bear and jostle a weak spirit though otherwise good as a childe from his father and make him cry and take on dolefully for want of that countenance which did smile upon him Power generates pride unlesse it sit in a very sweet breast the effects of this are bloudie and not a man can withstand to any purpose but he that is steele to the backe 'T is said of Vzziah that when he was strong that is externally strong that he was lifted up to his destruction This Prince after his great victories fell upon the worship of God and carried it by his owne greatnesse as he pleased which is a plague proper to pride to be spiritually and desperately wanton to creepe into the Temple and to confront God as highly as may be And the Text tells us of Azariah and fourscore brave Priests of the Lord that withstood him saying It pertaines not to thee O King to burne incense but to the Priests of the Lord which are consecrated goe out of the Sanctuarie thou hast trespassed and it shall not be for thine honour There were fourscore of these magnanimous spirits then would there were fourscore thousand of these now in the Christian world they are much needed to withstand violence against the worship of God against the priviledge of Ministers and people Blindnesse hardens men fooles will as soone strike with a club as with a twig as soone stab with a knife as with a straw every one that bowes not downe to the Idol of their fancie this is stoutnesse to destruction as the forecited Scripture speakes and 't is pitie it should destroy any but such as are guiltie of it and yet it will if not withstood What a dolefull condition would all have come to if those few brave spirits had given way to all that the King in the blindnesse of his heart would have done A Christian indeed magnanimous is he that stands in the gap in a time of wrath and none else this man is a Phinebat an Azariah one that stayes the plague the sword the wrath of God that eates upon us and would eate us out all unlesse some such brave spirits appeared abroad and at home in the field and in the Citie You can doe no service to quench the fire of jealousie that now burnes unlesse you get more fire in your hearts Life and death is in the ballance and the scales stand which scale will weigh downe we cannot tell onely this I can say this grace of Magnanimitie put in that scale where the life of the Kingdome lies would turne the beame presently and life should weigh downe death peace and prosperitie ruine and desolation 'T is pitie that brave spirits are no more smil'd upon some such buddings of hope are now and then but they are blasted againe men are alive a while and then dead Persons which are in such a condition that are pretie well one while and at deaths-dore againe another while men have still feare lest some vitals wast in such a state which is not yet discerned England if death should cure all thy diseases at last for want of a little life what a dolefull giving up the ghost will this be Whither wouldest thou carry thy cold off-spring that they might grow more warme To such and such plantations beyond the Seas Between thee and them is a great gulph and it may be they that would goe to them shall not they that thou wouldest should come to thee will not they that stay in the Citie famine may devoure they that goe to flie out a sword may cut off A Serpent a Lion or a Beare sword famine or plague may divide all between them within dore and without Surely England thy giving up if ever that sad day come which the Lord grant it may not will be with such ghastly groanes with such hideous shreechings with such tabering of breasts and tearing of haire with such weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth as scarce ever any eye saw or eare heard since wrath and desolation began among the Gentiles Wherefore call upon thy selfe O England and call upon thy Physicians for Christian magnanimitie tell them what death thou fearest and what grudgings of it thou feelest alreadie in severall parts Where there be palsies and such diseases which are by cold which be numbe and dead the parts there rubbing is good to fetch heat and agilitie Rub one another frequently exhort one another daily strike fire in one anothers breasts admonish reprove but doe all in love Passion generates passion wild-fire is not magnanimitie this burnes all it doth not save all Magnanimitie springs out of love 't is a stout spirit candid with the sweetnesse of Christ and made a Lamb and a Lion as Christ was a Lamb when among sheep to be led by them but a Lion when among Beares and Wolves to awe and lead them Magnanimitie is the perfectest temper of Christ in all this world 't is a Lion lying downe with a Lamb and doing it no hurt and a Lamb playing upon the hole of an Aspe and receiving no hurt it is one that can doe no hurt but can and will doe much good 't is one that fels himselfe like Christ at a very low rate to doe good to all COLOSSIANS 1.24 Who now rejoyce in my sufferings for you 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 SUfferings both externall and internall the word imports such stripes upon the flesh as did affect and afflict the spirit that did make passiones animi soule-passions There is such an affinite between the body and the soule that it is hard to separate them in suffering yet a divine hand of God who is father of spirit and flesh makes burthens pinch more upon the one then upon the other as pleaseth him Pauls cup was eminently proportion'd to Christs 't was to fill up that which was behind of the afflictions of Christ and Christs cup had those ingredients which made his soule heavie to death they did deeply affect not onely his flesh but his spirit Body and soule were
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a house and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to distribute Which makes the sense run thus according to that family distribution which God hath made to me The holy Ghost distinguisheth gifts into good and perfect both come downe from above but under a diverse notion the one as common to all the World the other as proper to his Family they are good gifts in themselves which bade men have their health their wealth their learning all good gifts but not perfect gifts they want one thing as our Saviour spake to the young man in this case and this one thing the maine of all to wit the speciall love of God fatherly mercy rapt up in them Family distribution is fatherly goodnesse speciall mercy a perfect gift Choyce indowment is mans blessednesse Doct. This God gives All the posterity of Jacob were blessed but Joseph was a Nazarite amongst his Brethren saith the Text i culled out by speciall providence from all the rest and choicely indowed and imploid the very creame of Love dished out to him The pretious fruits brought forth by the Sun and the pretious things which put forth by the Moone and the chiefe things of the ancient Mountaines c. And observe here the prime blessing is brought up in the Reare that which makes all other gifts perfect and the favourable acceptance of him that dwelt in the bramble the favour and love of God wrapt up in every thing wee have is that which makes them full mercies and this had Ioseph Deut. 83.16 he had top favours blessings came upon his head upon the top of him that was a Nazarite from his brethren This kind of providence died not with those persons and times but lives still in an Evangelicall sense Christ goes through this World and picks out here and there one from among his brethren and makes him a Nazarite indowes him with choyce mercies Family dispensations bespangles him with such Jewells as they weare above in his own Court riches of the body and riches of the minde and inlayes them all with the good will of him that dwelt in the Bramble This was prophecied then when the Patriarchs had their speciall indowments and touched in their kindnesse the Scepter shall not depart from Judah c. and unto him shall the gathering of the people be Gnammim peoples Gnammim binding his foale unto the Vine and his Asses colt unto the choyce Vine Gen. 49.11 Christ doth gather and select still even among the Gentiles As far as us Gentiles doe these words looke To him shall the gathering of the peoples bee Not one people to wit the Iewes but peoples Jewes and Gentiles A choyce Vine Christ findes out amongst us Trees of speciall vertue and noble blood and spirits above all Trees and ties his foale to these unites himselfe to this body by the same spirit by which he so indowed and ennobled that ancient people of the Iewes Choyce indowments being mans blessednesse and this sesable that which God gives now I would fasten this naile in the temple with a word of use Vse Content not your selves with common blessings covet the best gifts seeke family favours childrens mercies or you cannot be happy We place blessednesse here t is not here t was here but is not now t is risen t is above there must your industry lie Seeke those things which are above where Christ is at the right hand of God The mercies of Gods owne family make us and none else Such dispensations as have the speciall love of God wrapt up in them Let no man thinke this an unpossible thing to attaine the things that are above will come down to the conservation of the whole the naturall Heavens will descend the supernaturall will too Christ though at the right hand of God will come down and sit at your right hand and guide you and impart the things that are above to you clothe you in the habit and fashion of that countrey if sought to and desired But the plague is our hearts are carnall and lust onely after low things we place blessednesse in our belly and worship Dagon Dagan frumenti Deus a belly-god The Apostle alludes to this where he saith Whose God is their belly Red pottage lusted after the birth-right is nothing How affection workes is not heeded by you yet your life is in it and it goes to the heart of God to see how you lavish and lay it out for that which is not of any nobility or worth in order to such creatures as you are Wherefore doe you spend money for that which is not bread not white bread not living bread not that bread which came down from Heaven not such as the family above feede on You that feed on such mercies owe much to God I will touch this and conclude You that are like Joseph Nazarites among your brethren separated from thousands of your owne flesh and bone and made great endowed with Noble gifts and imployed in Noble workes to attend upon the great King of all the world as his onely favourites your should doe as Joseph Goe saith he haste ye to my father and tell him thus saith thy sonne Joseph God hath made me Lord of all Egypt come down to me tarry not Genes 45.9 divine mystery is in all this and it hints your duty goe haste you to Heaven and tell your father what honour is by the Lord Jesus bestowed on you that he hath made you Lords over all Egypt over all your lusts which did keepe you in bondage that he hath put his owne ring upon your hand and his owne Gold-chaine about your necke and made you secundi the next to him in all the world and onely in the Throne is greater then you t is a sweet thing to be going often to Heaven and telling there how much we feele of it upon earth Choice endowments call for choice duty as we are winged we should mount There were choice vowes under the old covenant Deut. 12.11 Some choice offerings that upon some choice mercies received they performed to God You have received choice mercies make choice vowes understand me Gospelly make sweet Gospell raptures of all Noble favours received Your Roman dames had some Jewels worth millions which they called uniones because they were incomparable and had none like them singulars such as had no fellowes and these they bequeathed when they died as an inheritance to posterity they were of so great worth God hath given unto you such precious Jewels uniones singular gifts such as cannot be fellowed in many of your brethren weare these Jewels every day though it was the fashion of the Roman dames to weare their uniones upon great daies hold forth all your choice gifts choicely to the great glory of Christ My Dove my undefiled is but one she is the onely one of her mother she is the choice one of her that bare her the daughters
him Neutrality is condemned by this point some will be neither for nor against Christ which cannot be all must be for him Conceits are strange where the heart is naught can a man onely be a looker on in matters of God which concern his glory and our eternall welfare Flesh is fearfull and where this predominates all the care is to look to one and that one is self and not Christ which will be the shame of that one unto all forever O how dear is name and state wife and children now But how dear is Christ Men of the world look into your hearts now if ever you would know them throughly would you not fain stand Neuters now in our cause to give your purse some rest Is not the pulling of your purse-strings as the pulling of your heart-strings Alas for me what shall I and mine do all will be gone I shall be quite undone What is Christ beleft is all gone Nothing will be for Christ as it should be when the heart is not I would you would all look to this Give your selves to the Lord and then you will give all that is yours This they did they gave their own selves to the Lord and then to us by the will of God Make your hearts throughly for Christ and you will make all other things with ease Lusts unmortified the heart is unruly the heart unruly will part with things according to its own will and not according to Christs An unruly heart becomes froward frowardnesse knows none but its own will Who is David and who is the sonne of Jesse that I should take up what is mine and give to I know not who Many things go for Christ a while plate horse money men and of a sudden all is checked and nothing shall be for him the plague of this is at the heart this was never for him but yet men do not consider this but plead a thousand things of this side and that speaks all more miserable Two things speak the heart for Christ the rise and the scope of action the heart is not for Christ let the action be what it will when it springs not from love Peter lovest thou me Feed my lambs Naked action though never so good speaks not the heart for Christ but the spring of that action Do ye love Christs Lambs and feed them I will tell you a sad thing many a souldier hath a hand for Christ and a heart against him and what a pittie is this So many a Citizen hath a purse a little open for Christ and a spirit quite shut against him Certainly our motion for Christ is heartlesse motion love oyls her own wheels as long as she hath any work or any power and we are quickly weary of well-doing The spring of action and the scope of action speaks the heart for God not what you do but at what you aim He that seeketh his glory that sent him the same is true and there is no unrighteousnesse in him John 7.18 The generation is spiritually plagued which is worse then all the plagues which are upon us men do little and mean lesse scarce a true heart amongst us The body hath two eyes but the soul should have but one looking onely at Christ but shew me such a man now We are a kingdom of squint-eyed persons states are broken any way will serve to mend them let whose will lose is there any way for me to gain Trialls are quick spirits perverse kingdomes reel nothing to be had you must comply and do as others do and seek your self for you cannot rid it out thus we reason Simplicity is a rock I see but few of these in our seas Surely surely souls are drown'd apace in the deluge that is upon us Men that did look bravely at Christ now look basely at themselves which speaks more wounds to a wounded kingdome the Lord heal such hearts or else when will this land be healed Coloss 1.17 And he is before all things c. Doctr. HEre is a term of connexion in the front of this verse which calls for something to be spoken relatively Circumstances are multiplied to winne respect to Christ Much is said before and here is more and yet all expression too little to winne affection The heart of man naturally is damnable cold One ornament is enough to set a man dear in your breast but all ornaments not enough to set Christ dear Affection naturally is no whit divine Christ is very honourable in gifts and so in years he is the ancient of dayes He is before all things and yet all nothing Let us all bleed under the basenesse of our affection so much should not be said to quicken were we not all very dead There must be some divine principall in the soul ere any divine principall held up to it will take it if heaven were open to you yet would you have no heart to go in unlesse your hearts be opened too Should Christ himself come from the dead and stand in that glory before you in which he stands now at the right hand of God yet unlesse something be done within this sight without will not gain you to him you will tremble and intreat him to depart Sinners know the plague of your heart Christ is not revealed in you and therefore all that here he saith to you is no more stirring You have glory after glory here and yet nothing gains you spit out the sowernesse of your souls in the face of him that is sweet to you I am afraid nothing is yet done within you and is this nothing to you And if so your state is the more grievous to Christ When we do not love Christ we should confesse it to him a plague hid Christ looks not after it but lets it ramble and kill the soul Yet must we Christs servants strive with you still and fight with dead men as long as we are in this dying tabernacle and all that Christ saith of himself we must say to you though you grow worse and worse into every chamber of the king of glory we must lead you though it be of no taking glory to you My text puts me now to speak of the eternity of Christ to you he is before all things which is one of the highest things of concernment in the world to see what this will do We must be sweet to sowre souls though they grow more sowre by it we must put sweets into filthy stomachs though they cruddle in their stomachs and spue them up again in the face of him that prescribed them Coloss 1.17 He is before all things c. LIke to this is that expression of Christ Before Abraham was I am They are expressions onely competent to Christ as God and put us to speak of that which is altogether above us to wit the Eternitie of Christ Eternitie is continuation without termination quae nnllo tempore finitur that is bounded with no time Melchisedeck is made a
had if wanted by any people and with more content to Christ then lesser things great persons delight to give like themselves He asked life of thee and thou gavest him long life even life for ever more As for naturall life Christ maketh nothing of this gift David thought that to beg naturall life had been a great request and no doubt but he would have accounted this much in some straights but God maketh nothing of this as being not to give like himself An eternall God loveth to give eternally The gift of God is eternall life This is the priviledge of the generation of them that seek him they ask small things and he giveth great they ask one thing and he giveth them a better they ask like themselves and he giveth like himself Tender hearts are afraid to ask great things but it should not be for 't is most becoming him with whom we have to do and you will sooner get him to give audience about such things then about petty temporary things Kings will not be moved in small things but in matters which beseem their greatnesse to this they are ready Our God is ready to give the least good thing we need to tender every hair and every leaf His leaf shall not wither but he is most delighted to give the things that are most like him When Jacob wrestleth in a case of naturall life the Angel would fain get gone doubtlesse his petition lay too low for the Text saith he was greatly afraid and had there not been something wrapt up in the businesse that had an eternall respect and which the Angel at this time did more look to then Jacob did doubtlesse Christ would have got away he would not have been troubled with Jacob all night onely about the naturall life of him and his Let weak souls remember the carriage of the King to Hester when she cometh upon matters of weight the golden Scepter is held out and she toucheth it What wilt thou Queen Hester It shadoweth out what Christ is to his Church ready to give things of weight such a royall life and state to his Church as he hath himself and to continue it against all Hamans Coloss 1.17 In him all things consist c. PRovidence hath put me to speak of many things but now she puts me to speak of her self she is a servant of servants she waits upon every one but now she commands you to wait a little upon her to know what she is and what a blessing you have in her Of Christ as a creatour you have heard and now as an upholder you shall hear of him In him all things are made of nothing and in him all things abide or else would turn all to nothing One thing lives in another fish in the sea foul in the aire brutes in the earth but all in Christ In him all things consist There is an inconsistencie in the creation by the curse one thing cannot live by another one thing bites and devours another great ones eat up little ones the whole world is a great body gnawing out it self it hath gnawed it self to skinne and bones now 't is so old and torn as is very sad to look upon or live in and it would have gnawed it self to nothing long ere this if Christ had not upheld in him hath the whole creation things in heaven and things in earth a reconciliation of consistency father would kill sonne else and the stones in the street would rise against you all but in him these all consist The expression speaks supportation there be many things in the world and they all live upon one Thou openest thy hand and satisfiest every living thing There be many mouths in the world and some gape very wide and yet one hand fills them all In whom things have esse they have porro esse 't is the case of all created things they are dependant The noblest life below Christ is in Christ upheld in him or else it would die presently In him we live move c. Man holy man lives the highest life of all creatures here below yet this is in Christ life is the noblest thing and Christ is the fountain of this he is the fountain of the noblest life that any creature lives all life the life of plants the life of beasts the life of men the life of Saints the life of Angels all runnes from that vast spirit of life that is in him Look what your spirit is to the little world that is Christs spirit to the great world your spirit carries life about to all to every finger to every toe and to every joint your soul is a fountain of life to all the strings veins and sinews of your body so is Christ to all the creation he gives life to all Bread is called a staffe and support but this is but by Ordinance from Christ for life comes not merely out of bread it comes from Christ life is not in bread but in the word of blessing which comes out of the mouth of Christ One thing would die in the bosome of another if all were not in the bosome of Christ children in the bosome of parents and parents in the bosome of plenty for in him and not in these all things consist The expression speaks disposition Every life hath proper motion this also is in Christ In him we live and move Look how seas and winds and heavens and birds and beasts and men move and admire for 't is in Christ Christ is not onely the supporter but the orderer of all things 't is not in the noblest creatures to live its own life nor to move like to its own principle of motion 't is not in man to order his steps Man hath the noblest life the greatest parts and gifts and yet 't is not in these to order themselves like themselves 't is not in man to order his life like a man do you not see many men live like beasts In whom is it then 't is in Christ No life hath its one property independant we cannot live of our selves nor we cannot move but in Christ although we have life life and motion proper to it is in him this is true at the same height of the new man We can do nothing of our selves not think a good thought thinking good and holy thoughts this is the property of a holy spirit and yet this its own property is dependant 't is not in a holy spirit think holy thoughts but 't is in Christ To live and to act the least acts of life is in the fountain of life In him all things consist that is beings and actions Christ doth uphold goings as well as beings Uphold my goings in thy paths that my footsteps slip not Psal 17.5 Such beings and such goings Christ upholds he upholds the world and disposes the world being and government both are upon his shoulders that is being and disposition of being Who hath given him a charge
over the earth or who hath disposed the whole world Job 34.13 These things speake the nature of providence what it is 't is a divine condescension to the necessity of the creature Christ becoming an ark for every species and for every individuall power floating upon mercy with the whole creation in its bosome Providence is power made out of mercy into food and raiment for the body grace and glory for the souls Providence is either common or speciall Common providence Common providence is the naked supportation of being and but a little more at best That the wicked in hell are is providence but it were better for them they were not that their misery did nihilate them unlesse their mercy were more Common providence is an act of power dispensing things commonly the heavens give their wealth to all and so do the earth and the sea the sunne lights good and bad all in and out of the world God upholds all that fall There is a generall compassion upon our fallen condition by which it is upheld and lies in the way of speciall compassion Some things Christ carries upon his back others in his bosome the one is common providence and the other is speciall He upholds all things by the word of his power he carries all things saith the originall Common providence lasts but for a time God will not alwayes be good to bad men The triumphing of the wicked is short saith Jobs friends They flourished like a gree Bay-tree but were suddenly gone saith the Psalmist of the wicked Divine dealings shall be exactly suitable to condition wicked men as they have not a drop of grace so they shall not have a drop of mercy to cool them though now they have a great deal Providence is very promiscuous for a time all comes alike to all but 't will be very proper precise and distinct in its way divine dealing shall speak the man the hand of God shall plainly speak out the heart of man as the Lord will be known so shall men be known by the judgements which he executeth this is a Cain the brand of a vagabond is upon him this is a Judas the character of perdition is upon him providence marked the one and pointed out the other 't is he that dippeth with me Both these examples rypifie that divine carriage shall be such to all of that side as plainly to speak out love and hatred Goats shall be known by their places providence will be so exact If the Bore cannot be known by his hair and his tusks yet he shall be known by the knife that is in his throat and his roring Time shall be when this expression in him all things consist shall loose its latitude above half the world shall be shut out of the common providence of God utterly and then will be the devils harvest O what a deal of businesse will he have then and how will hell enlarge it self when he shall have the ordering of all his own in the world as he will Speciall providence Speciall providence is wisdome ordering all things about man to an eternall good using the rod and the staffe to comfort giving and taking away clothing and stripping the body to make the soul divine Providence seems to be a heap of confusion but it hath alwayes a proper scope and all its acts which to us are strange still make very directly to it There are two sorts of vessels in the world and these are fitted to their proper end saith the Apostle one to honour and the other to dishonour not an act of God in the world but it hath a fitting scope in it not an act of God about a Christian but it hath a fitting scope to shape his soul for Abrahams bosome to fit in Christs arms for ever A man is not to measure speciall providence by an externall successe of action towards him as most do but by an internall successe how doth poverty or riches health or sicknesse better the heart Right-hand providence is speciall providence Why with-drawest thou thy hand even thy right-hand pull it out of thy bosome Psal 74. When that hand orders all to me upon which I shall stand for ever and orders all so as to bring me there and set me there this is speciall providence David speaks much of Gods right hand towards him then is a right hand upon me when all is ordered to bring my soul to its right end and this is in Christ In him all things consist In him grace is upheld ordered and brought to glory Grace cannot live without Christ glory cannot live without Christ In him all things consist Speciall providence is perpetuall but yet with respect to our abiding in him with whom it is in him all things consist and out of him Saints cannot consist If a man abide not in me he is cast forth as a branch and withers which men gather and cast into the fire saith Christ Christ carrieth as he is leaned upon cast burdens upon him as many as you will and he will bear them all lean not upon him and he will let you fall and all your burdens upon you Christ cannot endure to have his children out of his bosome if they keep in his arms he carrieth them for ever and is never wearied with them but let them go out of his arms and he is tired with them presently Speciall providence worketh in order to faith though it work not simply or faith Christ doth all freely but yet in his own way Go teach all nations to observe whatsoever I have commanded you and lo I am with you alwayes to the end of the world In such a way Christ walketh walk out of that way and you will never meet him This is divinity not understood mens ignorance is to be pittied when we presse dutie as in order to which Christ moveth they say we presse it as merit for which Christ must move unbelief destroyeth speciall providence à tanto licet non à toto in part though not in whole Some things Christ doth to the soul when it doth not beleeve and that is to make faith and other things he will not do till it doth believe and yet doth all freely In him not out of him do we consist Use Having opened unto you the doctrine of providence I will give you the use of all 'T is a hard time many are much put to it I have nothing to subsist saith one and so saith another What hast thou not Christ to subsist with In him all things subsist and canst not thou make a subsistence in him Extremities put poore hearts besides themselves this is the misery of miseries when the soul cannot see in whom all is My husband is dead my trade dead but Christ is alive and therefore all is alive a husband is alive in Christ a trade is alive in Christ better then any you can drive to maintain It was enough to Jacob that Joseph was alive though
he and his were ready to starve Let it be enough to every distressed heart that Christ is alive though trade and husband be dead Christ hath all yet though every one else be robbed in him all things be upheld and in him you shall be upheld Ob. In him I may have soul-subsistence but as for bodily subsistence surely that will fail for the meal in the barrell is almost quite spent and when this is gone surely I shall want my bread Canst thou trust Christ for thy soul and canst thou not trust him for thy body If thou canst but look up to Christ as all things do though not as noble things do yet thou wilt have meat Sol. The eyes of all things looke up to thee and thou givest them meat Cry but as Hagar and thou wilt have drink Seek but as the young Lions they seek their bread of God and thou wilt have bread If thou canst but rore as they do thou wilt be heard and bleat and bellow as the cattell of Ninivie some deliverance will come out Christ is never put to it though you be he will find one thing or other to make provision for all The eyes of all look unto thee and thou feedest them Providence hath meat in her mouth for all Ob. Meat may be given but the time may be long first and my cheeks begin to grow pale already my servants cry my children cry my guts cry for hunger surely I and mine shall starve Sol. No thou shalt not providence works oportunely thou shalt have meat in due season these all wait upon thee and thou givest them meat in due season Ob. It cannot be means are gone and friends are gone Sol. That is nothing Christ is not gone providence maketh strangers friends enemies friends ravens to feed others whose property it is to devoure and to feed them seasonably morning and evening Among enemies the children of the captivity found friends and found favour for a tender conscience in Babylon Ob. A little relief may be to me possible onely enough to hold life and soul together but under such sparing providence life will be worse then death when mercy is ministred nothing answerable to my necessity Sol. Let not this terrifie in Christ all subsist and subsist well thou maist not possibly have so much as thou hadst nor so fine as thou hadst but as long as Christ is thou shalt subsist well and thine own heart shall say so Providence doth not alwaies give alike but doth alwayes do enough for the best condition of being and yet let me tell thee further this Providence bringeth in sometimes a great deal more then we expect See a brave instance in Jacob Gen. 48.11 And Israel said unto Joseph I had not thought to see thy face and lo God hath shewed me also thy seed Providence is plentifull and bountifull as well as seasonable and bringeth in twise as much twenty times more then we think of enough in supply necessity yea enough to satisfie desire Jacob had corn for necessity and he had also the sight of Joseph and his posterity and the life of Benjamin and many gallant mercies more which bordered uppon these even to the utmost of desires so literally was that promise fulfilled to him thou satisfiest the desire of every living thing Desire is vaster then necessity in most creatures in man it is I am sure and yet providence is so bountifull that it satisfies this Providence not onely brings about what one needs but what one wishes yea more providence doth prepare things and bestow this and that which the heart cannot wish nor expect it doth prevent us with loving kindnesse Two things must be eyed to mak Christ giue out himself plenteously for your sweet subsistence the first is interest I am thine save me saith David God is very tender about his own a child shall have any thing Remember me O Lord with the favour that thou barest to thy people O visit me with thy salvation Union draws out all the fulnesse of Christ what goes beside the pipes which are laid into the founntain are but drops and by means of these pipes too these droppings are upon the world Christ would not give forth a drop of favour to the world were there not some in it nearely allied to him all wicked mens mercies are but as it were some droppings of the great mercies of Saints this kingdome would not consist were there not some Saints in it all the upholding it hath is long of them that are united to him from whom he cannot break off England use thy Saints well they are thy pipes and veins to heaven through which thy great blessings fall upon thee All art must be used to advance interest in Christ out of the favour of God and you will be outed of all whether it be the case of a person or a whole nation You are not my people and I will not be your God Lo-ammi Lo-eli This man is none of my child let the devil look to him let his own father provide for him this Kingdome is not my people let it bleed to death and 't will will God say England look to this or thou art lost and all the world shall not save thee let thy reformation be such as to render thee Christs Church that he may say England is my people or thy consumption will kill thee Friendship in Heaven is all to the lively-hood of a Nation or of a person here every thing will run crosse whilest the great wheel is out with one lets all set things right with Christ and all will run well let disadvantages be what they will But thou Israel art my servant Jacob whom I have chosen the seed of Abraham my friend fear not for I am with thee and they that warre against thee shall be as nothing Interest must be made and then maintain'd or else life becometh uncomfortable When souls grow loose they find the evill of their way Christ is tender in providence to tender hearts 'T is harder to bring ones heart so near God as one should and then 't is harder to keep it there but yet how difficult soever the soul shall know it is a bitter thing to depart a spirit of love and union abates and then flowers that smell sweet in the breast close and Christ withdrawes My soul cleaveth after the Lord thy right hand upholdeth me Psalm 93. The spirit of union must not be checked it must work after the Lord freely In this way the soul hath a right hand upholding it and this maketh and keepeth the life contentfull Grace is a pursuit of Christ they live most sweetly that runne most swiftly after him check this pursuit and you die Unbelief maketh fear fear setteth the soul at a stand shall I go forward or shall I stand still Now God is displeased the heart tortured for its basenes Englands fearfulnesse to pursue Christ hath deprived her almost of subsistence and tumbled her
grace that goeth forth in height goes forth very exact Of his fulnesse we receive and grace for grace Fulnesse works exactly to make the recipient fully like it self grace for grace The best wine is kept till last Full dispensations are best the best wine these are kept till last and they are kept by Christ thou hast kept the best wine till last Grace goeth forth free but not without order no soul hath fulnesse presently though Christ be fulnesse alwayes Vessels of mercy are narrow mouthed weak hearts I speak to you to keep you quiet O ye of little faith You have but little faith and yet complain that ye have not great mercy fulnesse comes in by opening the mouth wide that dead soul that can spread himself upon the living neeses seven times perfect life comes in by spreading our souls upon him that is perfect Every thing in Christ is mine when faith saith this in the heart then every thing indeed actually becomes mine The eye of Christ becomes mine to see the hand of Christ becomes mine to work and the feet of Christ becomes mine to walk Our right lies as concealed till faith acts there is much in the fathers house but the soul starves till it remember it self and own its father I will return unto my father and then I know I shall have bread enough what he hath I shall have strong acting of faith makes Christs fulnesse yours Fulnesse would fill your vessells but your hands jogge and that runnes besides which should runne in There is never a time you come to these waters but here is powring out enough to fill you all but every ones hand jogges almost so that much precious water is spilt and every one returns empty Jacob is ready to draw water to water all to fill the bellies of all the cattle but Rachel will do it her self she is shie and modest and will not take help Christ is willing to draw out his fulnesse and to fill every heart but we are shie and modest and will be doing all our selves and not trouble Christ we will be drawing out of this thing and out of that duty to fill our souls and not out of Christ Let my beloved come into his garden and do his work himself for I can do no more Blow O north-wind Blow O south and make my spices flow out for I beat and blow and nothing will come out but sinne and shame this brings in fulnesse fulnesse comes out of nothing I am nothing preaching nothing hearing nothing but Christ all and this makes him all unto the soul the clearer in self deniall the fuller in the fruition of Christ You rest in your works and stagger at the promise through unbelief and how is it possible that fulnesse should fill you You are full of self and you cannot be full of Christ the promises are pipes from the fountain which are laid of purpose to fill you and you stagger at them I would every bleeding heart did know what wounds him and who is his greatest enemy he thinks 't is Christ and alas t is not thou hast not a dearer friend in the world then Christ is nor one that pities thee more thou art the greatest enemy to thy self and thine own unbelief keeps thee low this is the secret leak in the vessell which thou hast not yet found out thou hadst been full else long ere this Christ is full and art not thou full Search thy soul certainly there is some leak unbelief is long ere it be seen but when it is no monster like it 't is more uggly then Sathan then that cage of unclean birds below as that without which Sathan nor sinne could do any hurt A stubborn child that had blasphemed was to be brought forth and those that heard him to blaspheme were to lay their hands on his head and he was to be stoned Unbelief is the frowardnesse of the heart which makes you to blaspheme God and his gracious word bring forth this froward child and lay your hands upon the head of it and cast stones at it at the throne of grace say Lord this is that child that hath blasphemed thee that hath dishonoured thee more then any evil stone it to death from heaven this suit you must pursue and follow which would be filled with the spirit Finally fulnesse speaks such dispensations as make and settle peace in the soul and Christ is King of peace he is King of Salem he hath the command of peace he can still the raging sea with a word of his mouth so he can a raging conscience and he must be looked upon and acknowledged according to such a transcendent abilitie and then he gives out as he hath in him fulnesse to supply the necessity of the soul Lord I know that thou canst do whatever thou wilt Now Christ works richly Christ will have his prerogative acknowledged grace is his own to dispose as he will all his wealth is his own he can advance a soul at his pleasure if there be no word which the soul ever yet heard that hath spoken peace Christ can create words and make them so drop from his lips as to make peace Devils are at the command of Christ and Angels are at the command of Christ yea the holy Ghost is at the command of Christ he can breath and blow with this wind where he lists Christ is met half way as it were when the soul can thus look toward him when Prerogative is fully acknowledged Coloss 1.18 He is the head of the body HEad speaks fulnesse and that which bears upon this to wit Office of the one we have spoken of the other we are now to speak Divine ordination fills vp one vessell and then makes channell out of that for others Office is a conveyance of gifts for a publick good something to draw out one to the use of many Christ doth bear Office to the creature which is more humilitie then can be exprest he is head The word speaks rule Christ hath government upon his shoulders the government of the choisest body which God hath in the the world He is the head of the Church Every corporation hath priviledge but none more then the Church Jerusalem is free yet not lawlesse she hath a head Universall bodies are great the invisible catholick Church takes up heaven and earth and yet not masterlesse all under rule and Christ is the head of this great body Christs rule is universall God ruleth in Jacob to the ends of the earth saith the Psalmist Yea to the ends of heaven There is a throne in the Church militant and Christ sits upon that there is a throne in the Church triumphant and Christ sits upon that We have such an high priest who is let down on the right hand of the throne of the majesty in the heavens Hebr. 8.1 There is majesty below and above and Christ sits as head upon them all every knee bows to him The rule of
lost intense affection makes through action what you coldly act you doe by halves Sin makes more then scars upon us it makes deep wounds you stirre with all your might when you see such distresse if there be any bowels in you God wants not bowels he lays our condition to heart though we doe not our dying condition puts life into him unlesse I stirre this sinner is lost unlesse I stirre uncessantly this world is all lost all are under sin wounded gasping giving up thus God puts home necessitie of vitall action upon himselfe This is our plague we cannot put home the necessitie of things upon our selves we are so carelesse and forlorne could we it would make us restlesse to worke out our owne salvation you may see it in Paul Necessitie is upon me and I cannot be quiet unlesse I preach unlesse my soule stirre uncessantly 't is lost for ever alas for us wee cannot put home necessitie thus though our lives lie on 't and therefore doth the Devill fetch away all under our very Citie-wals What we cannot doe God can and doth God pities man because no eye else doth our desperate condition is still in his eye and O how his heart beats he can neither slumber nor sleepe he watches continually because we are groaning and dying some hope of life and then and not till then he rests It gave rest to the Father c. Vse The propertie of divine motion you see 't is restlesse to good the contrary to this is diabolicall and yet oh Lord how common is this in the world to be restlesse to evill Bowels worke not at all but braines worke that they foame and froth againe The losse of meate nothing the losse of sheepe nothing the losse of Heaven nothing so men may goe in their owne way A man cannot be too slow to sin nor bogle enough at a bad businesse nor doe too little of that which is naught 't were better a man had no legs then run to evill no braines then acute and restlesse to doe evill well What grieves not you grieves God but if this will not doe persons shall have their course and take as comes 'T were better I had nothing no parts then all Satans Restlesse soules to evill you are all Satans you serve him with your might with all your strength you serve him when you are up and when you are abed you give the devill foure and twenty houres to his day God you know had his Holocaust under the Law his whole burnt offerings haire and hide and all burnt so the devill hath his Holocaust his whole burnt offerings Restlesse soules in sin you are Satans whole burnt sacrifices you are all on fire of hell heart tongue hand you offer up all your rich parts wealth you are in the depth of sin in the gall of bitternesse and if you can sucke any sweetnesse out of this doe What is wholly Satans is firmely his give the Devill hold with both hands and heel ' hold fast Restlesse soules to evill you are close prisoners to the Prince of darknesse such as are double bolted and chain'd who ever get loose you will not 'T is sad to see the bent of mens spirit 't is nothing to them to resigne up all to the Devill you are well pleased so is Satan but know that he doth not so easily resigne all back againe he fortifies as he takes and will not lose an out-worke gain'd easily If Satan have got hold but on a mans tongue or eye or some such like out-part this is not taken away from him againe presently but when he hath all he makes impregnable works Satan secures his throne if he get into the soule that soule shall sinke to hell ere he will rise out of his chaire Satan will not let you goe said I You will not let Satan goe which are restlesse to sin Two knit in love who can part them Satan and you burne together in affection and God will not breake the match you shall burne together in hell Till this marriage day you shall not want tokens can you tell how many blacke letters are written to conscience whilst affection burnes to evill When you see sinners sin and smile aske them Doth God and your conscience smile Face mirth is nothing to me mens courses must not gaine credit because they are impudent I beseech you deale truly with your eternall soules how oft doth your consciences smile upon you There is no peace to the wicked What then to him that is nothing but wicked What nothing but warre and wounds and bloud inwardly and yet smiles and flaunts and flouts outwardly against good What a bad condition is this If you will talke of your wayes talke without to others as God talkes to you within and then 't will be worth the hearing if you will write write as God writes within and 't will be worth the reading Active spirits in ill want not imployment conscience takes them up with reading newes from beneath Eye time to come eye time present the condition is dreadfull where affection in strength workes to any evill Let it make soules breake off from this course and become imitators of God who is restlesse to contrive good Gods motion is exemplary you may safely make his spirit your pattern and 't is a blessed soule that can move as he doth Bodies bleed to death soules blead to death all England giving up and we are not restlesse in prayer nor restlesse in preaching nor in wrestling with God and man to save The houre of Christs crucifixion is come and a spirit of slumber is upon us we cannot watch nor pray what ever temptation be at our dore Jacob was renowned he wrestled for himselfe and familie all night he was restlesse till he had gotten the blessing but alas our night is not over and God knowes when 't will and we are tired alreadie purse tired spirit tired men will doe nothing but God will if we wrestle restlesly with him A man may doe much with God a righteous man may one unrighteous man may by importunitie Was not the unrighteous Judge overcome by importunitie Keep on to move as a Christian to God and to men and make no conclusions at home take wing and to Heaven and die not in the nest Mercy still is in travaile for them that are in travaile for it Error of one hand must not make error of tother wee have our mercies by degrees that dutie may be hightened not flatned Let 's better every one by our unwearied goodnesse Wee must serve God for naught let issues be what they will paines must be perpetuall 'T is Gods case as he hath to doe with us he is restlesse in meanes to gaine us all but alas how few doth he gaine If men were restlesse till they had done their part God would be restlesse till he had done his Be restlesse till you are in Gods garden and he will be restlesse to make a hedge about
Christ hath the same life and the same felicities of life he hath the same meate the same habite and the same dwelling one Sunne hath as many raies as tother and riseth as high as tother they move both in one spheare they dwell in the same house they have the same traine and attendance where one goes tother goes My Father and I will come and sup with him Christ and his Father sup together lodge together Esse radiatum esse is communicated Glory is communicated the very glory which God personally weares is communicated to Christ Glorifie me with thine owne selfe with the glory which I had with thee before the world was All Christs is Gods and all Gods is Christs All mine are thine and thine are mine The very glory that God weares himselfe the glory which he weares in heaven that which he wore before all the world was is Christs Whatsoever is under the whole Heaven is Christs Job 41.11 Yea whatsoever is above the whole Heaven whatsoever is in Heaven is Christs glory is his thine is the kingdome power and glory What glory Why that glory which is at the right hand of God The choicest glory in Heaven in the Heaven of Heavens is Christs and at his dispose Vse What is so compleat and yet not gaine the heart speakes that heart very naught and yet this is very common though Christ have all fulnesse yet emptie creatures care nothing for him When cost is liberally laid out and when all laid out will bring nothing in againe that 's sad when all in stocke is out and brings in nothing this goes to the heart of God I planted a goodly vine a noble plant a right seede and yet that trampled under foote said God Fulnesse runs out Mens cisternes are broken so that fulnesse can fill nothing such broken cisternes must be mended or else they will be broken to pieces 'T is wonderfull that Christ is so full and we are so emptie the fault is not in him 't is in us it must be found out and laid to heart it cannot goe well with us else I must speake to three sorts of men some have nothing and some have but a little not one of a thousand full with the fulnesse of Christ all have their fault and must be told on 't Some have no grace nor no good nature farre from righteousnesse as the Prophet speakes full of pride and full of malice Solomon spied it in his time so doe I now The heart of the sonnes of men is full of evill and madnesse Eccles 9.3 Men watch not their hearts and they please themselves in it as loving ease and are undone ere they are aware Evill is a growing thing but when dunged a little by remisnesse the heart will grow full of it presently and then the next step is madnesse as Solomon saith full of evill and madnesse The heart full of evill and the man grows mad to maintaine it and to spread it Alas for thee England thou art in a sad condition full of mad-men men whose hearts are full of evill and mad to maintaine it men emptie their chests of gold yea they emptie their veines of bloud to fill their soules and lives full of wickednesse which they love The heart full of evill cannot hide it selfe the curse of God is upon sin in strength to cut off the sinner that is white to Harvest Things will struggle for life though they die for it full streames have their adventitious occurrences which make overflowings Were you at Oxford you would see spring-tides every day hearts full of evill and over-flowing and running out at their mouth in blasphemies as blacke as hell 'T were well if such a great plague were at such a great distance from us as Oxford but alas for us Oxford is full London is full England is full scarce a heart amongst us but is full of evill and mad to maintaine it What will become of us all Hearts are full of sinne God is full of wrath the Land is full of bloud Ah Lord are we not in hell on earth And yet emptie hearts consider nothing Delusions destroy thousands men full of pride their eyes are swelled out till they feele much they can see nothing amisse in their owne wayes The Land is full of wrath not a man of you almost but full of distresse in one kinde or other and what 's this but Gods broad demonstration that your hearts and lives are full of sin yet can you see this sense is the first step to remedie where this is not notwithstanding all meanes ruine not remedie is neere ah England I feare thy condition but yet still will pray your hearts are full of sin your lives full of miseries are your eyes full of teares O that my heart were full of grace Christ fills the hungry c. Grace in fulness is the felicitie of life bend not after this heighth and you cannot be fully happie Set God his distance and be but never so little and he cannot kisse you unlesse you take him fully into your armes he will be jealous of your love and set you at a distance every day more then other till he hath shaken you off for ever Times square mens course yea mens grace affection and action must rise but so high lest it set all afire names state fortune if love burne so strong as some Ministers would have it 't will burne us out of all The Lord be mercifull to mens basenesse this earth will not beare us long else hell will be full of such soules ere such soules will be full of grace Let times be what they will truth must be pursued to the full this fils the soule with grace neglect this and 't is impossible your hearts should be full of grace how full soever you get your purses of money Great things in the world cut the throats of men they will rather have emptie spirits then emptie purses leane soules then leane cheekes Ah Lord how do the dead bury the dead in earth now Fill one anothers mouths with earth Little of the world must serve if wee would be full of grace This gold lies not in earth but in Heaven not in the world but in truth dig these mines throughly and you will find all treasure and be filled with all the fulnesse of God Consolation springs from this point a word of this and I have done Wee have said much of Christs fulnesse and yet too little Christians comfort your selves 't is all yours Christ hath all and is full so have you in him claime your proprietie and comfort your selves with it in all your distresses in this life as Paul did Phil. 4.18 I have all and am full saith he and yet had nothing in the world The Apostle had Christ which hath all heaven and earth Qui habet habentem omnia habet omnia He that hath Christ hath all formally or eminenter i. whatsoever is wanting in the creature at
man naught at heart is Gods enemy Neutrality hath the seeds of enmity there is the buddings of hatred where love is but cold to Christ Men that love not hate truth They that are not with me are against me saith Christ and all that are against Christ though never so gently neutrally and indifferently yet are his enemies Judas was an enemy when no hearty lover as well as when an actuall betrayer of Christ Enmity is sown deep it lies long under ground and puts up with a very little blade at first no body takes it for such a deadly weed as 't is it may be not the party in whose heart it lies but the Lord of the vineyard who knowes all grain in its first bud calls men and things as they are this is a Serpent by kinde though it do not sting yet he will do False love is true hatred Cinders will burn out anon when blown Christ is disobeyed when stubbornly opposed Some are fighters against God and will be so these are deadly enemies Deliver me from my deadly enemies saith David Psal 17.9 There is fighting against God within and fighting against God without strong art and industry to kill conscience in a mans self and others this is a bloody enemy Christ knocks at most mens doors though he can have entrance into few Not a soul where the Gospel comes but he strives and wrestles with it to gain it to God pravity cannot bear these conflicts something is taken to destroy conception vineger is used to prevent vomiting to stay and still the wambling stomack that it may hold what it hath acts of violence rushed upon to darken that light that troubles and any medium good that may but stupifie that faculty that stings when the soul chooseth his own way this is called resisting the Holy Ghost this is a fight under deck a murthering Christ in the cradle these are Christs bloody enemies Christ layes the axe to the root of some sinners and some sinners lay the axe to the root of Christ as soon as ever any word of Christ begins to take hold of the heart as soon as ever Christ begins to stir in the conscience or affection as if the soule were on fire on hell all means are used to quench the Spirit hell is sent for to keep out heaven many bad spirits to keep out one good there are sad issues of this men kill themselves sometimes rather then Christ should live in them Opposition hath rejection folded up in it this is distinguished from that as it carries despight against the spirit of grace makes the hand bloudy if need be as well as the heart and tongue with the bloud of Gods dearest ones these are Esaus red all over And the first came out red all over like an hairy garment and I called his name Esau Gen. 25.25 The summe of all is this An enemy is one that with resolution and delight disobeys the will of God Vse What is your state This is my errand from this point to you Are you enemies or friends to God Amongst Christians this may seeme a strange question yet needfull all are not Israel who are of Israel Christ hath enemies in his own house would we knew them would they knew themselves 'T is a time of much opposition party against party this side against that if wee should all be found opposite to Christ we are undone Heate transports so doth self-ends such persons doe they know not what and are they know not what themselves one while this and another while that constant in nothing but enemies to Christ being secretly sway'd by blind and base principles Say we not well that thou art so and so and hast a Devill Hypocrisie knowes every one but her self exactly knowes another to be a Devill an arch enemy to Christ but knowes not her selfe to be so To mistake others proves sometimes afflicting but to mistake our selves is damning O how should we beg to be delivered from this In a trying time wherein many prove rotten let us doe as Christs disciples lay our hand upon our own heart is it I Tell me O Christ is it I that am an enemy to thee A man that looks into his heart and then looks up to God he will know much He that tasketh himselfe but to know one will certainly finde him out but he that tasketh himselfe to know many and to call them by their names as hypocrites or the like will certainly mistake them or himselfe or both Truth and the heart compar'd speake out one another Christ puts us all upon an exact way to know the thing in question Yee are my friends if yee doe whatsoever I command A friend loves not onely in word but in deed what you are in action for Christ speakes out what you are in denomination whether friends or enemies Yee are my friends if yee doe c. Good talke is cheape hath a great many friends if this were it But what doe yee doe for Christ Action also must have its latitude or els doing is nothing neither The will of Christ runs forth into many precepts that 's obedience which excepts against none Then are yee my friends if yee doe whatsoever I command you Truth is Homogeniall one precept sweet and all precepts are so when the heart is right the heart is naught the man an enemy to Christ that is partiall in his Law Yet this is the plague of most mens hearts Surely Christ hath more enemies a great many then we are aware of We are for dividing the living childe therefore are divisions and rumors amongst us it speakes stony hearts unnaturallnesse to Christ he answerably handles us the truths we scorne are the swords which kill us as Gods enemies as a generation of hypocrites Integrity hath a double universalitie in it all Gods precepts are obeyed alwayes a friend loves at all times it doth not divide Christ to day nor to morrow nor never will his bowels will not beare it all truth is of everlasting sweetnesse in a sound soule Christ is the bright morning Star a Star holds its glory 't is alwayes admirable a man admires it to day and admires to morrow and so as long as he liveth So is Christ in the eye of him which indeed seeth him The Land in which wee live is stony ground Love withers it doth so very frequently men that were friends fall off and become enemies Apostate are the worst enemies Christ hath yet how many doth this time make The Land is full of Apostates therefore it groanes God is avenging himselfe upon these enemies first fire goeth before him and burnes up these enemies round about Psal 97.3 The most notorious are made examplary amongst us 't is so in the proceedings of God All the adversaries of the Lord should tremble when some are executed and learne instruction by his judgements that wrath is kindled which will burne you all such of you as are not burnt here will be burnt
in hell Wrath is a flame that never goes out it runs all along upon the earth as 't is said of the fire which burnt every greene thing in Pharaohs time so this burnes every flourishing wicked person first or last here or hereafter Adversaries of the Lord cease your course could one say nothing of the abilitie which Christ hath to right himselfe upon his enemies yet 't is pitie he should have any enemies he is so good he keeps up the earth you goe upon the heavens you breath in they would come together else and crush you in the midst Heaven and earth are full of Gods goodnesse though you be bad you live in the fruition of these and thousands more as bad as you and yet he doth not grudge your enjoyment Christ beds you and boards you where ever you make a meale you sit at his Table and live upon his expence every day he gives you your daily bread all comes out of his Treasure who ever be the purse-bearer and he payes the Reckoning who ever carries it to the hoast And now will you nay can you be enemies to such a friend and cut his throat like Judas at his own Table Christ is the spirit of your bloud the red bloud of your cheeks the white sinewes of your joynts the marrow of your bones the breath of your nostrills and can you be enemies to such a friend Christ numbers your haires writes downe your members presses all the creatures in the world to serve and defend you and will ye not love him Can you be enemies to him or any of his Christ is naturally good and he is morally good he is patient long-suffering abundant in this goodnesse You have been transgressors from the wombe from the Cradle you have fought against Christ making your members your weapons you would have killed him long ago if you could yet he hath not killed you You have multiplied your transgressions so that you have made the heavens weepe now for many dayes together and the earth to bleed now for many moneths together you have pressed the Lord and all the Creation with your sins and yet you are at ease though all these be in paine You have been prodigalls following excesse of riot chambering and wantonnesse and yet Justice hath not eate the nose off your faces the flesh off your bones nor rotted you limbe by limbe alive to defraud the grave of her due and yet can you be enemies to this God Finally Christ is not onely naturally good and morally good but divinely good he is not onely patient but mercifull not onely slow to wrath but ready to forgive though you have been bloudy enemies yet he is ready to cleanse your scarlet sinnes during all the times you have continued enemies plotted against him he hath not plotted against but for you When wee were enemies God gave his Son Let my Son goe out of my bosome saith the Father and let him goe to a wretched world amongst millions of enemies and let him preach to them pray for them bleed over them die for them that they may not die Can you now doe any other but love this God and love this Christ I can say no more would I could weep out the rest for all the enemies of the Lord which these words will not work upon COLOSSIANS 1.21 Enemies in your minde c. TRees which grow high and spread much root deep so doth sin nothing growes higher nor spreads broader then sin it spreads over the world The world lies in wickednesse The height of sin is answerable if one should speake of it under such a metaphor it reaches up to heaven The cry of your sin is come to heaven saith God of the sin of the people of old And sinners are set out as climbers up to heaven Amos 9.2 Sin is a Tree that rooteth deep as well as shooteth high The heart is deep saith the Scripture and sin roots there If you see a man an enemy in his tongue or in his hand by wicked works the roote of this is in his minde Enemies in your minde by wicked works The prime seat of sin may be our subject a while to insist on which is in the soule Seeds are sowne where they may grow best so doth the evill man sow Tares where they may take and live and that 's in the minde The soule is fit mould to give nourishment to sin 't will assimulate 't will transforme and become one with that which gets into it No substance that can or will so mould or consubstantiate it selfe with Satan as the soule of man Every substance will not inocculate because there is not a fitnesse between all substances to assimulate and consubstantiate sap and vigour will not digest themselves together The soule is a Crabstock fit to graffe any forbidden fruit upon it will naturally give out all its sap The advantage of property is all to make such a life and in such abundance The soule is I cannot say blessed but cursed to fruitfulnesse in evill as the ground is to Bryars and Thornes the minde is dunged ground by divine wrath for every root of bitternesse in it are passions to keepe sin warme faculties to make legs armes eyes any member for it to work provide and defend it selfe as can be imagined sufficient for any thing to subsist withall The soule is a fountaine of life and that which lives in this must needs live and thrive well As the soule when it is seated in Gods breast who is the fountaine of life then its full of such a noble life and so by such an advantage of neernesse to him that is all so in a proportion 't is with lower things that which bosomes its selfe in the soule is planted by the rivers sides t is in the fountaine of naturall life it must needs live therefore and thrive much because of that advantage it hath of neernesse to and ones with a substance so vigorous and congruous to it Sin is seated where it may best reigne that 's in the minde what conquers the heart carries all and gives lawes to all the minde is the sterne of the vessell a supreame power within a finger of God out of fight which turnes the whole vessell that which gets and orders this necessarily gets and orders all The Philistians strucke at that in Sompson by which they might be sure to rule him and lead him whither they listed though a strong man they put out his eyes These Philistians were a type of the Devill in that act man was a strong creature and that which Satan strucke at was his eyes darkened his minde saith the Apostle then leads him whither he listed Where Satan struck at first there he strikes still where he seated himselfe then he abides now When he would make a Hamon a proud man where doth he begin to accomplish this Within he puffs up the minde first and then blowes up all Vainly puft up with
counsell of Gods will is his guide Mercy goes forth and embraces this or that person and not from any respect else but Gods will he does all things according to the counsell of his will Prerogative carries all with him God is free and will be free to give what he will to whom he will he hath no respect nor obligement upon him nor will have I will have mercy upon whom I will men proffer to some persons this or that to induce them to do this or that for them and they say no what we do we will do freely God is such a noble Spirit The whole creation is spiritually turned into a Chaos darknesse is upon the face of the deep upon the deepest understanding every soule under heaven without form and void of God As all things were then materially as clay in the hands of the Potter free for God to shape how he would one to this another to that so are we now spiritually and as then he was led in the old creation by his will so is he now in the new creation and by nothing else the will of none interrupts or swayes a jot with God Of his own will be begat us by the Word of truth Jam. 1.18 Not any thing without God swayes him in what he does in the old creation or in the new and therefore all that comes forth from him is free and can be no otherwise I will give you an argument more of this nature and then the use of all not a creature upon the face of the earth that can present any thing of his own to God to draw love and to make friendship in the least kinde Distance and disparitie is so great between some persons that there is an utter incapacitie in one side to make and ingage the other What can a begger a vagabond present a Prince with to make his favour if he would be made with a gift The case is ours out of naught comes naught we are naught and nothing else and can present nothing else to him who is nothing but good There is no soundnesse in us Esa 1. 'T is a remarkable expression if we had any soundnesse and 't were but very light we might present that to attract and make friendship and love and so with something of our own help by art a bad condition but there is no soundnesse in us from the crown of the head to the sole of the foot What grace doth by degrees in a very long space of time that sin did presently Grace doth purge wholly but 't is long first The God of peace sanctifie you wholly c. Sin corrupts wholly presently as soone as ever Adam transgressed it did as some strong poyson run quite over him presently so that we are become as the Psalmist saith Altogether filthy Psal 14.3 Such as are altogether filthy cannot offer any thing of their own altogether cleane and yet so it must be to him who is altogether so or else it obtaines nothing with him and therefore 't is that the Scripture speakes of our righteousnesse as menstruous ragges Vse I have now shewed you that mercy cannot be merited but justice may The favour of God goes for nothing in man but the wrath of God goes forth alwayes for something in man a course of sin should be trembled at ah Lord what will this bring about My goodnesse extends not to God but my wickednesse doth My grace merits nothing but my sin merits much A man may doe enough to deserve hell quickly The troubles of the whole Land are many every Country dyed with bloud I know how folkes speake of all this yet not a drop of bloud more shed then merited If thy many wounds and much bleeding prove mortall O England thy death will be but just desert 'T were well if what now is upon us were all we have deserved we should then give a guesse when our troubles would end whereas now we can give none A person or Nation pursued according to merit perisheth unavoydably The wages of sin is death Our remedie is free mercy that God breake off from what he is yet but entred upon to wit judgement for if he goe on to doe but justice woe unto us all he will finde matter enough to keep justice alive till every person in the Land be dead See Esa 9. He shall snatch on the right hand and be hungry and he shall eate on the left hand and not be satisfied they shall eate every man the flesh of his own arme Manasseh Ephraim and Ephraim Manasseh c. And for all this his anger is not turned away but his hand is stretched out still vers 20 21. Justice will finde worke a great while if this be onely imployed about a people 't will eate out all and looke over the hatch for more For all this his anger is not put away c. When justice hath destroyed a whole Land yet not a jot satisfied nor pacified but stands ready to burne it againe and againe Mercy finisheth her worke that consummates the creature justice finisheth her worke too and this consumes the creature When justice doth finish her worke yet then 't is righteous 't is in righteousnesse He will finish his worke in righteousnesse If this be the determination of God upon us that justice shall finish her work in the middest of us we are in a consumption and can never recover He will finish his worke in righteousnesse c. That 's a fatall sentence If free grace intercept not till justice hath finished her worke 't will eate us out all Wee have deserved to die all beate at heaven to know whether the heart of God be hardened as yours is and whether he be onely judiciarily bent against us And whom he will he hardens c. Flint to flint strikes nothing but fire God hardened and we hardened nothing but blowes and fire will or can issue out of this Plead with God for grace and compassion for the Land or we cannot live More particularly I would make application of this point Grace is free in soule distresses let us all feed upon this doctrine God doth not choose us and imbrace us for our beautie as Ahasuerus did Esther and yet this is it that makes many poore soules to shake off what they should take hold on I am very filthy preyed upon with this lust or that should such a one as I kisse the King of glory Is there any reason to thinke that he will take me into his armes and make me his delight Wee may not measure the wayes of God by the wayes of man Grace workes above reason that which we can give no ground for God doth his love passeth knowledge in the breadth length height and depth of it in the spring of it Why is this man or that beloved can any man give a ground more then that which Paul doth It pleased God to reveale his Son in me Nothing can be rendered as
tittle of his will shall live though bad and good shoot at it Satan hath as large an army in the field now as ever was known bad men good men Satan is got into Judas yea and he is got into Peter Master drive gently drive warily save your skin and avoid the bloody cup and yet Christ will be too hard for both Christ wants wit and wants learning and many things else in the eyes of standers by and yet though so weak conquers God hath chose the foolish things of the world to confound the wise God should be honoured in his way the Psalmist breaks forth sweetly into blessing God from this ground that God out of the mouth of babes should ordain strength And so Deborah notes it in her song specially and sweetly how Jael a woman did a mans work and used a mans instrument She put her hand to the nail and her righ hand to the work-mans hammer Women are usuall very aucherd at mans work left-handed but Jael is right-handed at it she put her right hand c. and that which was a work-mans hammer is now a work-womans hammer and she blesses God and extols him that ●●us trode down strength by weaknesse and turn'd a woman into a man and a man into a beast and butchered him on the ground So should we now that children are turned into men little prentise boyes made valiant to cut off the mighty and do the great works of the kingdome and little towns and villages to waste great forces Certainly we of this Land are very much behinde hand with God in honouring and praising of him according to this admirable way of working Things that are precious you will lose none of them you save the very dust of gold The manifestations of God are the most precious things in all the world the very dust of Gods feet in every path of his we should carefully keep we should talk of all his doings how much more therefore of his wonderfull doings when he doth much with nothing and much for nothing for worse then nothing to wit sinfull man How God goes in the Sanctuary and how he goes out of the Sanctuary in the family in the city in the countrey in the army upon what weak legs and with what little toes should be all written down in the heart first and then carried up to heaven for God to reade Our father loves to have his children brought home to him often to see them and their Nurse how well they prosper together You cannot present God with a more taking sight in all the world then with one of his own actions with its speciall circumstances They were under the Law to lay their hand of the head of some offerings that was to point out Christ on whom they trusted Bring an offering to God any action of God with its speciall circumstances and you lay your hand on the head of the offering you point out Christ to all the world as he whom you trusted on in your way and as he whom you would have all else to do the like and on none else and this is very sweet to God he loves to lie high in the breast of all God hath done things in England so me thinks as to be crowned for ever in every English heart by a very noise amongst the Mulberry trees he makes the mighty run and fall Not by might nor by power but my Spirit saith God 'T is by how much God gains in your hearts that you are to measure his love to you in his works With little God doth much for you if with much you do little for him in speaking of him and living to him all will end sadly at last If nothing will set an instrument in tune you break it and burn it this makes me feare our state in the midst of hope God is very good to thee England but thou continuest very bad dead inwardly dead spiritually which according to reason one would think should make death corporally Finally this way of God should be trusted in or this God which can thus work should be firmly rested on When extremities are great and little means appearing then our hearts sink now misery is mortall but of our own making for 't is all one with God to save with few as with many Nothing kills the man so long as faith keeps alive and faith can never die if the soul well consider the point in hand that any thing is enough for God to work salvation by I am much in debt but a little oile in the cruce left God can blesse a little to rise to a subsistance and to discharge off all ingagements A little of God is enough to make one very rich very strong very wise very blessed in all conditions let misery be as much as ' twill Some are disheartened from duty because opposites before them are many visible advantages very few these soules lie insnared in their own devices and dye at a distance from God which they have set themselves to keepe their body safe with a little light and an honest heart God can enable to doe much to fight with the Prince of darknesse very learned heads and very malicious hearts Did not God inable many poore women and illiterate men to befoole the bloudy Clergie of the former ages of the world and to hold faith and a good conscience in despight of all Were not them we read of in the Hebrewes out of weaknesse made strong and the point in hand tells us that this is the way of God Resolution should carry on to dutie and then let God alone to carry on in it how weake soever you are or how strong soever your enemies are A great dore was opened to Paul and there were many enemies at it he but one and weake and yet along he would and venter upon Christ to make way through them which makes one weake one stronger then a thousand COLOSSIANS 1.22 In the body of his flesh through death IN severall verses foregoing the extremitie of Christs sufferings is mentioned and yet here againe In whom we have redemption through his bloud vers 14. This is repeated and amplified ver 20. where 't is call'd the bloud of his crosse Here is the same thing repeated but with variation of termes what before was called bloud and bloud of the crosse is here called death Christ did bleed to death for sinners Christ underwent much but it workes but little upon us Often repetition of the same thing is for energies sake that what is not laid to heart at once speaking may be at second often repetition of Christs sufferings speaks lowdly this That 't is a hard thing to be kindly and throughly affected with what others undergoe for us Doctr. Jacob underwent much for Laban so did David for Nabal heat and cold but both coldly remembred such cold carnall wretches they were both Earth hath no sense this is the state of our soules naturally Can a stone
lay any thing to heart Such was ●abals heart and such is ours stones as wee came from the rocke from whence wee were digd Affections follow sense where nothing makes impression there can be no compassion Wee are dead in trespasses and sin dead folkes consider not who mourne for them who die with griefe for them Faculties hardened the childe will throw aside what the mother which bore him underwent the pangs the screeches the teares of her that traveld in birth with him Abilitie to dutie springs not so much from things without as from things within as the soule is disposed not as the man is ingaged so the partie moves I will demonstrate to you that disposition to this dutie of being throughly and kindly affected with what others undergoe for us is hardly attain'd It springs from goodnesse purely contemplated this is a very high thing to doe Such a one did much for me I did as much for him or I may doe If such be out in flesh I am in purse Now is others goodnesse kild with our owne now is not the love of God nor the love of man thought of and how is it possible that either should be beautifull in my eye In such a spirit love hath her wings cut and no matter to worke upon which is that that gives disposition to the soule to keepe him alive for ever in my breast which hath done any good for me We can doe nothing for Christ nor his people and yet all that is done for us by either we thinke to be deserved 'T is certain that infinite love moulders to nothing in our breast under the notion of our owne merit one way or other though we observe it not If a man lose his state his arme his life for me if I thinke he was bound to it by any thing of mine the life of the action dyes the memory of the man and his kindnesse cannot live long Not an act that Christ doth but we dash it to death against some industry of our own That any creature loves me is all love that any one shews mercy to me whether God or man 't is all mercy I am vilder then the earth below all desert desire as far as hell is below heaven a heart at this height stoopes and takes up kindnesse fully sweetly and keepes it in memory firmely Things taken up as meere love stick otherwise not This is a high and hard thing I may instance this to you in God he merits every thing at our hands we doe and more then we can doe and yet he takes up all under the notion of kindnesse and love and this makes him to remember all we doe and all we suffer exactly I remember the kindnesse of thy youth and the love of thine espousalls All is kindnesse and love which man shews to God And when I was hungry yee did give me this and give me that God looking upon all that we doe for him as gift and as kindnesse this makes him to remember it alwayes 't is hard to get to that pitch which God moves at It springs from love strongly warm'd the heart must lie very neere God which hath this benefit God hath but few that lie neere him Things of life will not live in a dead sea the acts of God which he doth they are very lively and yet these will die if the soule be not suitable which observes them Every degree of divine life is not enough to keepe favours done for us so divinely alive as they should be 'T is more then hinted in the text These Colossians had their Christian life but yet not so as to remember the love of Christ to the life alas who have 'T is hard to melt some things much fuell much blowing and paines used and yet all this must be to dispose the matter fitly to receive a lasting stamp and forme upon it A heart melted with love layes to heart the least paines and kindnesse shew'd to it Whence is this to me that the mother of my Lord should come to me said Elizabeth to Mary Vse As our hearts are below any duty it should humble us but as they are below things which are very weighty it should humble us much more The doctrine in hand beats hard upon us for melting hearts Christ suffers much for us man suffers much for us but neither considered by us What any Christian suffers for you you are to account it as Christ suffering he makes men willing to die for you to preach themselves dead to pray themselves dead to fight themselves dead and all these dyings the dyings of the Lord Jesus O that there should be so many persons bleeding in the fields for us and so few hearts bleeding at home for them and for our selves The strokes of God are various they are most mortall which kill the soule Our bodies are turned to dust apace and our soules into stones as fast Ah Lord how brawnie how bowellesse how hard-hearted is England become since a seate of war Husbands lose armes legs lives abroad and wife and children let starve at home Our war is very bloudy conscience in every man slaine not a tender heart scarce amongst us to consider the condition of the greatest sufferers for us in the Land Naball had his ease at home his quarters quiet and plentifull but what David underwent abroad to make it so at home did not move did not nor would not Nabal consider 'T is your case Londoners During all these bleeding times Christ hath been Quarter-master for you and so appointed your quarters that you have been very quiet very blessed in peace and plenty but what your brethren undergoe abroad to procure all this for you at home which of you doth lay to heart Vriah refused rest and solace at home because of the sufferings and hardship which the Armies of the Lord were in abroad The backes and bellies of thousands of you speake no such thing Ah Lord what will cure the pride and wantonnesse of this wicked Citie Drunkennesse and surfeiting now Can you laugh when your brethren mourne and when God frownes yee Epicures Can yee drinke wine in bowles and the bloud of your brethren in bowles You should at all your exorbitant meetings thus set fancy at worke The cup at my nose is the bloud of the slaine My curious napkins and table-clothes are the skins of Christians my guests the ghosts of the slaine my mad lascivious songs the groanings gaspings and shreechings of the wounded and dying Canst thou not thinke thus when thou art in the midst of thy jovall society O no 't would spoyle all my mirth 't would be like the hand-writing on the wall to Belshasar Dost thou tender more the spoyling of thy carnall mirth then the spoyling of thy eternall soule The guilt of all the bloud that is slaine will fall upon thee as an unsensible soule Hadst thou rather howle for ever then forbeare mad-mirth a little while If thou wilt not turne
and bones to feed on we may fetch a dish from heaven to mend the matter well enough if wee be so wise and so heavenly as wee should be We are the ruine of our own life 't is hard to get thoughts high enough Present things are the things onely to be minded we must minde this and we must minde it thus so we necessitate our minds and marre all What must I onely thinke of Shimei that curses Must I onely thinke of povertie and onely thinke of sicknesse that is upon me What necessitie of this There is no necessitie of this but yet I cannot doe otherwise Wouldst thou doe otherwise No I would not do otherwise How canst thou be remedied then Some are married to a Blackmore and will not be divorced to black melancholy spirits and humors c. which they love and will not heare to part with Rachel will not be comforted There is nothing to be said to these spirits till their burdens have more broken and humbled them Others are more ripened and mellowed by the rod to whom my question is Would you have your thoughts taken off from thinking so much of your calamitie Would you have your soules thinke much what you shall be and where you shall be O yes rather then any thing in the world The mercy is neare yea very neare which you thirst after Open your mouth wide and I will fill it Hungring longing and praying this is opening the mouth wide believe it the Lord Jesus is at hand he hath sent his Prodromoi his forerunners to lay in some provision he will sup with you anon and feast with you anon and then all will be well the soule strong and as high and as noble as its work Our strength to high duty is from full presence and full communion The choicest advantages to get this you should carefully use which would doe much in tother world which would be much above and before him where you shall ever be Some workes have a great deale of heaven in them reade them some persons have a great deale of heaven in them look out and read them some ordinances have a great deale of heaven observe them There is a great deale of advantage in ones standing to look a great way When David stood in Gods house he could see into heaven plainly and behold all the glory above and where his place should be for ever and what train should follow yea he was as if actually possessed of all Honour the Institution of Christ how ever despised by men or you cannot be so heavenly and so blessed as you would and should be COLOSS. 1.23 If you continue in the faith c. AS God turnes all to the good of his so Satan labours to turne all to their hurt The best people have one too many still at their table though they are not aware of him and he drops something still into every dish to curdle and sower it in their soules how sweet and precious soever in its own nature When the words of Christ wound Satan then drops in gall and vineger to turne convictions into despaire when they comfort he sophisticates and makes the doctrine of felicitie a medium to forget piety this in some words of this text is hinted in others prevented Heaven lengthens out a holy life to all eternitie it doth so in its proper nature 't is a laying of our soules in his bosome who hath us but by the hand here 't is not in it self nor under any consideration to end grace here or hereafter but to consummate it If you continue c. Two things of weight take up this text the doctrine of perseverance and apostasie cleaving to Christ and casting him off both these circumstanced and so drawne out that their aspect speakes them to the life To abide sweet a while and then to putrifie with the heat of times and smell carrionly this is not perseverance 't is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 permanere continuing in the faith or through abiding of the faith what 's that This is answered in the next words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 founded 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fixed One terme alludes to a house founded upon a rock that is unmovable The other term alluding to starres which continue holding forth their glory and vertue let what stirres will be in these lower regions they never fall from their orbe nor faile in it of any influence or lustre for any filthy vapours or fogges that come from the earth they are above them all and are faithfull and firm as the Heavens this is the propertie also of starres of the terrestriall globe Apostasie is also here drawn out to the life every fall doth not kill but falling away falling away from truth received glorious truth truth raising sweet hope glad Gospel expectation and be not moved away from the hope of the Gospel c. That truth which hath had its demonstration before all sorts of men Through abiding of or in the faith is the first thing that we are to stand upon By faith is meant the Gospel as is explained in the next clause Christ as revealed in his Word Truth hath a latitude within and without it self the observation of both is a through pursuit Truth hath a latitude within it self that is in the matter of it 'thas many precepts and all these their proper extent Thy commandements are exceeding broad The Gospel hath many rules directory many consolatory when the soul sets before it self all as a rule of life then doth it throughly abide in the faith then are you my Disciples if you do whatsoever I command you The whole bosome of Christ is the seat of the soul hereafter and the whole will of Christ is the seat of the soul here when the soul doth not make it so it is wanton and wilfull and doth not throughly abide in the faith Christ had a materiall garment when materially present and it had many threads but all weaved into one web and robe without seam or signe of one so Christ now spiritually present hath likewise a spirituall garment of like form The Gospel hath many rules when all these are weaved together by a Christian in his life and made a spirituall robe of state for the glory of Christ and not one thread left out when the soul doth put on all Christ and clothes himself with him from head to feet then doth he throughly abide in the faith Truth hath a latitude without it self 't is to live as long as we We are to be faithfull to the death so in every truth no truth is short lived to last a season only as 't is said of them they rejoyced in his light for a season if we make any truth short lived for any temptation whatsoever we abide not throughly in it 'T is in our spirituall marriage as in our naturall we are not freed from the carefull and painfull obligation of it till death The observation of Gods will
disadvantaged surely you will tumble up and down in your course till you tumble to your place if Christ shew not mercy to you I will now speak to you which are advantaged persons with gifts Remember the point such are but uncertain creatures in their course Trust not in your advantages for the certainty and continuation of your holy course No mans light is so big but Satan by his proper force or by divine commission can blow it out a soul in the dark whither cannot the prince of darknesse lead Sampsons eyes out and a Philistine a wicked person may rule him Parts looked upon make the soul blind and leaned upon make the soul weak for the man leaves a staffe and leans upon a reed he will certainly fall and yet he will not believe it till he is down Self is a gaudy thing things that glister dazle sight sight dazled the man will move madly you will see him run headlong into the sea and think it green grasse and woods When a man looks upon self the Devill alwayes lends him spectacles and his glasse-eyes are alwayes a bad guide things looked upon through his medium are commonly of false dimension too big or too little 'T is sad to heare how confident some are of the stedfastnesse of their motion I will die rather then I will do this or that Though all men forsake Christ yet will not I. Thou knowest not thy self consider how naught thou art now although so and so advantaged for good as temptations shall strengthen upon thee so wilt thou become worse thou wilt give backward and backward still till thou becommest stark naught Some persons upon view of self conclude they shall go currently on for they finde they get victory over such a sin and over such a temptation and the like I would speak to this I am affraid you know not the nature of corruption 't is like the sea in its motion it will seem to lose ground and decline such a part of the earth much for such a space of time and of a sudden again by a little advantage of wind come tumbling in and spread over as much earth as ever and more Again you know also this is its property when it leaves one point of the earth it will breake in as farre or farther upon another point It fals out oft whilst persons are treading downe some externall acts of evill the soule rises and swels with conceit and fancie of its own worth and goodnesse here is a Babel a Christian blasted before finished mouldring whilst building these buds wither because they want earth their end is naught so was their beginning had they seene it Such cannot hold out steady whose spirits are lifted up with some poore glisning snail creepings of their own Poison that breaks out in the hands and face and struck in by some art is not cured but a thousand times more dangerous 'T is the case of many malignitie breaks out in their tongue in their outward man in such and such broad base courses which doe disrepute them and by some paines and art they stop these filthy issues and strike the poison inward into their heart cease drunkennesse debauchednesse and now become proud of rakels become civilians and justiciaries God I thanke thee I am not as such and such no drunkard nor whore-master No thou art worse further from the Kingdome of God further from persevering and finishing a good course then they are from beginning of it A man that thinkes himselfe the better fitted for flight for any poore waxen wings of his own will when highest like Icarus melt and fall and be drowned Things that would move very steady must rise very high the upper region is quieter a great deale then the lower and better for steady motion As the soule rises above the world above its own indowments above all without and within it selfe and sits fully and clearly in the armes of Christ so is the stedfastnesse of its motion Christs armes doe not tire his hands doe not shake he carries Venice-glasses full of choice liquor and breaks not one nor sheds not a drop out of any one How many soules hath God put into Christs hand and yet he hath not lost one soule no nor one soule hath not lost one drop committed to him to keepe Satan is at our right hand continually but he cannot come so neare Christ Wee cannot carry our hands steady a moment he doth so jog it and the more we struggle to grasp and get into our hand the more he jogs it but the more we can emptie out all into Christs hand the further still from Satans power and so consequently safe This age surely is so whimsicall so drunke so staggering and falling because it leanes so much upon its own braine and so little upon Christ They that waite upon the Lord renew their strength they run and are not weary they run steadily to the last till they have quite out-run sin Satan and all molesting 'T is sure sweet motion when Christs armes still are onely the Chariot-wheeles in all things I wonder this advantage is no more studied Christians complaine of the unsteadinesse of their course and the unevennesse of their walking of nothing more 'T is a sweet thing to use prayer much 't is the steadiest winde we can saile by if there be any steadie winde below but rest not in this but in him whom you mention by prayer Doe thou keepe it in the thoughts of their hearts to goe on thus willingly Prayer is here used for perseverance but the person mentioned in prayer and not the prayer it selfe is rested upon for the thing sought Doe thou keepe it in the thoughts of their hearts COLOSSIANS 1.23 From the hope of the Gospel HOpe is a glad expectation of good something at a distance pleasing now and then smiling upon the soule and the soule upon it Man since his fall hath but little in possession not enough to quiet his heart a moment When I say man hath but little I doe not meane of the things of this life though all this world be nothing he hath but little of God Many have nothing of God they that have most have but drops and a thirst for flagons in suite for much enough to stay and quiet Stay me with flagons this is the panting of perfection here and when the soule can conclude its suite takes above and can sweetly lie downe and looke for a returne then it hopes Joy comes not in by vision here as it doth above but by expectation fallen things as they lie can glad no understanding man to look upon All the things in this world will not make up matter sufficient for a smile if rightly understood one may gather it from the composed countenance of Christ all the time he was upon earth This world is a big vast roome full of broken cisternes and man the prime vessell most broken such a forlorne sight can it be
this in their heart their not obeying is a demonstration of it A sad temptation is strongly seized upon you if it hold you you are lost the fearfull of this sort are shut out There be troubles in every course under the Sunne dost thou find none in disobedience Then the more is to come Bloud and death and hell are at the end of thy way Sinner and yet darest thou to keepe on in it Surely thou art not so much fearfull as wilfull Instruction cures distemper when 't is but of meere weaknesse when the soule waits to turne in with Christ and yet cannot but where it is otherwise lay open as much danger in one way pleaded for as in another way pleaded against yet the man will hold on his course which speakes the soule ingaged by will and not so much overborne by weaknesse and then there is no entrance for right principles I would let these alone which have shut themselves up till Christ breake open doores upon them and speake to a generation more ingenuous Men that are candid love to doe things that will end well then set upon the workes of Christ If thou be a Minister preach Christ faithfully who ever oppose if thou be otherwise of any other ranke practise the will of Christ sincerely what ever thou suffer Things may goe harsh a time but Christ will bring about a season 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 now I rejoyce that ever I did this and that ever I did that for Christ If Christ doe not bring about such a time here he will above O how joyfull are they above that ever they had hearts to suffer for Christ here below Now I blesse God that I lay in such a prison what a mansion have I to make me amends Now I blesse God that ever I was hungry that ever I was naked for Christ what precious meate and what glorious apparell have I to make me amends 'T were enough if the now of a Christians joy did not come till after this life but shall a Christian have one here Let truth and conscience keepe company in stormes and I think I may assure any man a sweet calme here let men and devils doe all what they can but let these two be parted there will never be a season of joy reall joy the soule is betrayed that hath any other opinion or practice The righteousnesse of action should onely be eyed by us as for other things skin and bones and goods and such like lumber should be all ventured in this bottome I am for Christ if I mourne all the dayes of my life and have not one teare wiped off till I come to Heaven all is one so one should set out setting Heaven at the furthest distance that can be thought of and then a man meets with it often long before he accounted in this prison or in that dungeon where one would look for hell rather then heaven so did Paul Now I rejoyce c. COLOSS. 1.24 Now I rejoyce c. PAul was in prison when he spake these words so considered bravenesse of spirit sparkles in every syllable of the expression Now I am in the mouth of the Lion now I am in the belly of Hell now I am in the face of Devils now I own Christ and triumph in all that I undergoe for his Name Divine magnanimitie wee are to stand upon 't is a soule in all conditions openly very stout and very amiable in the pursuit of Gods will Disadvantages are many in a Christian course in none more magnanimitie knowes none 't is one that can make a Trumpet sound admirably where there is no eccho in a pit in a dungeon in his coffin in his grave he will sing and make his chaines Late-strings among the dead he is alive now I rejoyce You have a Latine Proverb of warre Mars communis warre is of various event sometimes against one sometimes with one so I may say of the warre of a Christian 't is Mars communis sometimes we come off well sometimes we are taken and chained sometimes the battaile is so hot that all run away Magnanimitie stands to it then fights alone shee is oft a prisoner but never a run-away one is enough to wit Christ though all else run away or how ever disadvantaged otherwise yet upon this advantage shee stands to it alone and fights with many yea fights and sings thunders and harpes you have the voice of great thunders and of harpes joyned together Revel 14.2 The servants of the Lord fighting and thundring against Antichrist and yet harping and singing Est virtus omnia ad gloriam ferens A vertue that mouldes and shapes all things good things bad things prisons chaines bloud all to divine triumph Magnanimitie is alwayes very stout but alwayes very amiable when shee breaths and collects spirits she doth not curve her brow frowne and fret and the like but smiles in the face of crueltie it selfe Michal scoffed David and stoned him with her mouth but David smiles and dances Paul in chaines at Rome rejoyceth now I joy In the belly of Hell Jonah prayes yea gives thankes I will sacrifice to the Lord with a voice of thankesgiving salvation is of the Lord. And the Lord spake unto the fish and it vomited out Jonah upon the dry land Jonah 2.9 10. As the verses goe and are conjoyned one would thinke they did carry this brave sense that as soone as God did behold Jonah in this brave posture of spirit not onely big with prayer but with praises even in the belly of the Whale that then he spake to the Whale to give him up that then he spake to Hell to give up that person to Heaven whose spirit and action was there before There is an amiablenesse of person and an amiablenesse of action and Magnanimitie hath both shee sets the countenance right the eye right and the hand right when shee is stout 't is in the truth and for the truth shee pursues a noble game and abhorres all evill means to catch it to get Earth to get Heaven shee will not be bribed when there is any base carriage in a businesse none more ignorant of any such thing then a Christian truly magnanimous Christian magnanimitie is borne of humilitie and simplicitie and hunts after nothing more then the incouraging of the parents of which shee came but this shee pursues to the utmost Things that are of the truest and highest glory these doth a magnanimous Christian Nervis cunctis incumbere intend with every sinew all things that are simply sinfull or but of meane account come not into his thought 'T is virtus tendens ad maxima a Christian that struggles to be of all Christians the chiefe for humilitie for integritie for faith for love for fruition for emission for taking in of Christ for laying out for Christ A Christian indeed magnanimous is the greatest Merchant-venturer to the tother world that is he is mightie in stocke he hath many millions of
been driving this way and the Majesty and the justice of the Lord hath appeared and preyed upon them that would have preyed upon us fulfilling his word He shall breake in pieces the oppressor Psalm 72.4 As God remembers his word so we should remember him and write down his Noble acts upon our doore-posts bed-posts heart-posts to all which these beasts would have come for their prey These great acts of God prove mercies to men as laid to heart evill will returne and they which have beene so often driven back will be irresistible at length if he be forgotten which hath done all this for us COLOS. 1.24 For his bodies sake which is the Church ALL Christians in and under Heaven are related knit in one body by one soule to wit the same which breathes in God his holy Spirit Sacred society is glorious the Peers of all the world in a body robed and the great King of all the world in the midst of them such a fight as mortall eye never beheld His traine reaches from Earth to Heaven the foremost are in Heaven when the hindmost are here I helped you to a Scaffold to view the forepart the last day I would doe the like now to helpe you to view the latter that part of the traine which is going in at the everlasting doores but not yet quite in You may see a great deale of State at the doore of Heaven in the very hindmost soule of that company which are going in there That part which is gone in with the Bridegroome is mighty great so is that which is going in An innumerable company of believers conflicting with an innumerable company of enemies longing and waiting for the full redemption and liberty of the Sons of God The haires of our mysticall head grow not thin no not in this climate which is the most unhealthy they are thicke and bushy Can you number the haires of your head then may you number that company which Christ hath upon earth Can you number the Starres of Heaven Looke up to the Heavens saith God to Abraham and see if thou canst number the Starres so shall thy seed be which is fulfilled as appeares by the authour to the Hebrewes Therefore sprang there even of one and him as good as dead so many as the Starres of the Skie in multitude and as the Sand which is by the Sea shore innumerable Heb. 11.12 The haires of our mysticall head are many yet all of one colour blacke as a Raven that is beautifull and flourishing Gray haires are not here and there upon this head the Militant Church is for quantity great a Nation for quality holy the foundation of this Nation Christ the cement faith something above the revelation of reason something above the revelation of the best parts something above flesh and blood Peter there are strange carnall apprehensions of me in the world as if Christ had said how doest thou apprehend me My apprehension is vitall Thou art Christ the Sonne of the living God Observe the reply of Christ Blessed art thou Simon Bar-Jona Bar is a Chalde word and the same with ben an Hebrew word which signifies a sonne and Jona signifies gracious and as some translate a Dove so that t is as if Christ had said in our language Blessed art thou Simon sonne of grace sonne of that same Dove which descended on mee flesh and blood hath not revealed this unto thee but my Father which is in Heaven Thou art Peter and upon this Rocke will I build my Church Matth. 16.18 Ben which is the Hebrew word for a sonne is as much as the word building with us because the sonne is the building of the family our Saviour interprets so much himselfe in his allusive words upon this Rocke will I build my Church and Jona signifying gracious the metaphor is the same in sense with the former that Christs building here below is a gracious building foundation gracious to wit himselfe every stone gracious Bar-Jona's an innumerable company of believers I John saw a great company which no man could number 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and all sealed the cement of this building holy to wit faith a holy faith a most holy faith as the Apostle cals it Jud. 20. Conflicting with an innumerable company of enemies The Sea is a big body yet tossed perpetually so is the Church of Christ upon earth t is a body very big and very good and yet t is not so big nor so good but it hath as big and as bad a body to encounter it We are here troubled with Frogs and devouring vermin and the pit out of which they come is bottomlesse The gates of Hell are wide open against the Church of Christ here though they cannot prevaile against it they that take away mens soules come forth freely in what numbers they will and goe what compasse they will here all this world over of an instant and get at which hand they will of the best people when about the best worke they will take the wall of the Noblest soules and when about the Noblest worke get at their right hand The Sonnes of God were assembled and Satan stood at their right hand The locusts below goe forth by Troopes they are so populous in that land of death My name is legion for we are many Though but one speake when a poore soule is tempted yet the traine that attends upon this one is many I believe this roome is full of infernall Spirits and that not a soule of you now present but have a legion of them at your right hand jogging of you though these gates of Hell are not suffered to prevaile If there were no intermixing of Satans family and Christs in this world if those evill spirits which he hath at home by him did never come abroad so farre as into this world yet those that are here resident and weare the same skinne and clothes which Christs family doe are very many They that persecute my soule are many saith the Psalmist And he speakes of incarnate devils devils resident in our flesh and in our earth A doore is open to me a great doore saith the Apostle and there be many enemies how many that he could not tell nor no body else but him that set them on worke One doore open and many devils at it to shut it againe many devils at one doore so at every doore of hope that a Christian hath open to him surely Satans strength is great here that he can begirt every holy person and every holy action upon earth and yet this is the condition of the Church militant Elishaes condition shadowes the state of the Church militant mentioned 2 Kings 6.15 An Host compassed the City with horses and chariots in so much that the servant of Elisha cried out Alasse Master how shall we doe we are begirt with innumerable companies of mortall enemies many thousand deaths waite for us at every doore and this is the state
Eyes of a Sampson darken the greatest lights and confound the greatest parts that is speake ridles and parables at every word things unexplicable to the most learned men he can carry a darke Lantherne betweene the Egyptians and the Israelites make a cloud to go betweene both and to be darke of one side and light of to'ther Christ was in the midst of that project 't is often said in the Booke of Moses that hee was in the midst of the cloud that is he was the onely author of that great mystery 't was no art of Moses nor Aron nor any man else but Christ Christ hath a Kingdome but t is not of this world t is of that little World within he hath the Keyes of every roome within you he and he only opens and shuts these everlasting doores and at what houre he will every wheele in that curious artifice within hath its motion or check from him the spirit wee speake is of his ●nction t is in fulnesse given to him to make every knee bow or breake every eye blind or seeing of things in Heaven of things in Earth and under the Earth This thing is better exprest by the Prophet then eye can The Key of the house of David will I lay open his shouldiers so hee shall open and none shall shut Isai 22.22 Revel 3.7 The donations of Christ are absolute not such as ours which may and often are overborne the Eyes hee closes none can ever open the Trees he curseth barren none can ever make fruitfull dung as long as they will the things hee hides from mens eyes they can never see more his spirituall occlusive power is as his power apertive absolute and above controule Hee is the onely absolute at opening or closing the Eyes of the dead Vse 'T were well if the right state of eternall actions and things were seriously considered what is in the power of Christ and what he can do and doth to a perverse Generation Suffering in the outward man is the least that Christ doth to testifie dislike of any mans course and yet this as poore sensuall creatures we onely Eye How doth God carry himselfe to the soule how neer to it or how far off from it is he how plainly and cleerly or how darkly and misteriously doth he move within thee Is not thy soule in darknesse Shut up under unbeliefe in the valie of a shadow of death fearing evill the destruction of all Darknesse makes feares the Oracle within speakes doubtfully and the best Life hangs in doubt the Malefactor hath his book and cannot reade for his best Life the caracters are so old and so mysterious this is a great wound in the spirit and it is a wonder to me that any one can beare this and beare up yet so remisse are men till things grow ragingly desperate and remedilesse nothing is considered Terrified sinners Christ hath tyed a handkercher about your Eyes you are upon the Ladder ready for execution can you read your neck verse or not Legit ut clericus vel non A Gospel sence of misery is the first step to remedy Light is made to shine out of darkenesse God closeth the Eyes and then opens them I am at the doore of Heaven neere the Kingdome of God my night will have a day according to the course of of the Sun it will be so Let faith thus work and thou wilt be blessed speedily God makes light to shine out of darknesse when he would make a shining State hee usually makes it very darke first very darke and very sad and then reveales light very cleere and makes a very shining bright Heaven The order of the Sun what course it goes what long nights it makes in some parts of the World and then what long and glorious dayes should be remembred and expected this way comes in our blessednesse here In a darke condition when one cannot do as wee would we must doe as we can make advantages of little things Sampson being darke and starke blind made advantage of a little boy do thou said he lead mee to this place or that to the pillar where the house beares so must you poore darke soules which are starke blind in the best things makes use of such little things as before mentioned to be led by till you come to finde Pillars great Pillars whereon the house beares to doe great exploits T is sweet to consider that sacred concealements are but for a time and this time set by wisdome Vision is but for an appointed time That is a secret and a mystery to us which to Christ is vision the vision is but c. and shall be so to us in his light wee see light and in cases of danger and extremity he doth hasten When we are in a chariot of our owne conceits a fiery Chariot and Satan running away with us Christ saith to his spirit go joyne thy selfe to that chariot and interpret and now behold a nation is borne in a day a World borne of a day a World of light a Heaven borne of a day of an hower 'T is yet more sweete yea most sweete to consider when we can do nothing at all for our reliefe neither the greater nor the lesser not make use of a Lad to lead when we cannot make the least motion toward the light it makes motion toward us the Sun findes out us it findes lost persons and lost comforts it bares it selfe about unto every one who doth draw the Sun to this place or that Christ is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Pet. 1.19 you reade it a day Star the Latines rightly render it Lucifer because it doth lucem ferre Christ doth beare about light over the World to every one that sits in darknesse and needs it COLOS. 1.26 Which hath beene hid from Ages and from Generations THis expression meanes not totum but tantum not altogether hid but very much hid over what it is since the revelation of Christ in the flesh A full comment upon these words are those of the Apostles to the Ephesians cap. 3. v. 4 5. Whereby when you reade you may understand my knowledge in the mystery of Christ which in other ages was not made knowne to the sonnes of men as it is now revealed to his holy Apostles and Prophets by the spirit Ceremonies were but a shaddow of good things to come as great a distance between their condition and ours as betweene shaddow and substance their fruit had much shell and little kirnells we have no shell yet the kirnell bigger and sweeter to The sensuall helps they had spake for the most part no farther then sence What all those carnall Ordinances did spiritually meane we have in expresse words and these words explained and applyed with greater power and glory then ever from the spirit of Christ Mercies have their demensions they differ in grouths The drops that fall from Heaven are of severall quantities Christ hath in his hand blessings of severall
spirit they were such that had not so much as that circumcision which was made with hands much lesse that circumcision which was made without hands by the spirit A Gentile in the spirit is one ignorant without God in the World that is without the knowledge of God it is explained so by another expression like this that at that time yee were without Christ being Aliens Eph. 2.12 And by another expression to them that are without the Law as without the Law 1 Cor. 9.21 that is such as had no knowledge of the Word of God nor did acknowledge any such thing as a rule of life but their own blind traditions and customes Gentilisme is a meere Chaos a little World lying all in confusion darkenesse upon the face of the deepe the understanding which is as the face of the soule blind not able to finde out God in his Word or Workes what in essence or what in existence what hee is or what he doth in Heaven in Earth in the soule of man nor what hee will doe though all these exprest and told of at large a Gentile in spirit is one that cannot see God nor feele after him that can use neither head nor hand no reason nor sense divinely one that fits in darkenesse and cannot stir any power internall or externall towards the true God One that fits in darknesse wich is an expression I thinke in allusion to the Egyptians who had thicke darkenesse such obscurity of darknesse as the originall saith that they saw not any man his brother neitheir rose any man from his place for three dayes mittacheaif de sub se not from under himselfe or not from off himselfe and these were Gentiles and in this I thinke the lively type of all Gentiles who are in such thick darkenesse spiritually that they sit stock still not one can arise from of himselfe to apprehend any thing out of himselfe and above himselfe that which hee worships is himselfe the imagination of his own brain his zeale is seated in blind principles and this is his God that he knowes no God As I passed by and beheld your devotion I found an Altar with this inscription to the unknowne God and these were Gentiles and this blind principle was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Inn●itten or written in them for the Altar was but an emblem of their heart they did hold out by this what was in them to wit a God adored but no body could tell what no not they themselves any further then selfe some carnall fancies hotly pursued and after no other light would they search with braine or sense The Apostle reproves them in this scope though you have not the Word of God yet you have had the workes of God if you had pursued these as blind men that use their hands in stead of their eyes and make a good shift to finde their way you would certainly have found out God to better purpose then this inscription quotes and then relates the story of the Creation viz. who hath made of one bloud all Nations if happily they might feele after him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word notes touching or groaping with the hand not able to imploy understanding nor sense about the Word or Workes of God to finde out God which is just the state of a brute and so are the Gentiles shadowed to be in Pauls vision there were all manner of Beasts in the sheet that was let downe to him but nothing else A Gentile in spirit is one blinde and obstinate he shuts his eyes against some things and none must open them opens his eyes to other things and none must shut them he loveth darknesse better then light and no body must stir nor wake his love till hee please this obstinacy is well exprest by Christ Mat. 18.17 if hee will not heare the Church let him be as a Heathen an Ethnick which is the same word with the Text I stand on if hee will not heare let him be accounted a Gentile a Gentile is a wilfull person Let a man be in Church-state and under-light yet if wilfull in sinne loving darknesse and against light hee is as a Heathen that is he is a Gentile in spirit hee is formerly and really a Gentile onely he is not outwardly called so he is not called so by men but he is so by God The Jewes the greatest amongst them the Scribes and Pharisees that instructed company although of the Jewish Church and eminent in Office yet as obstinate and raging opposers of Peter and his Ministery are cald by the Spirit of God Ethicks and in the second Psalme where the Prophet speakes of Heathenish great ones opposing Christ applied it to them as fulfilled in them Acts 4.25 when they were let goe they reported to their owne company that is to the rest of the Apostles and Disciples all that the chiefe Priests and Elders had said to them and when the Apostles heard it they lifted up their voice with one accord and said O God which hath made Heaven and Earth who by the mouth of thy servant David hast said Why doe the Heathen rage and so forth and there cals them Ethnicks Gentiles and because of this that they were wilfull and raging in their blindnesse and wickednesse against Christ This property also of stubbornnesse was lively shadowed in that Type of the Gentiles forementioned there were such and such kinds of beasts in the sheet that was let down to Paul and wild beasts saith the Text to note that this is one eminent property in an ethnicall spirit wildnesse headinesse obstinacy in his blinde course Spirituall gentilisme is opened have I not done two works at once opened the Doctrine and opened your condition are ye not Gentiles in heart though not so call'd truth should be own'd whether with us or against us or there is no remedy confession of sinne is a necessary Gospell requisite sinners can have no mercy without it if ye lay not open your sinne to God t will lay open you to God Angels and men and a soule laid open by the word is one found out in the fact when God hath found out and seised upon a sinner for him then to deny the fact or seeke to breake away from him as one that breakes bolts by being more boysterous in sin this man will die for it and not have pardon no not hope on 't hee 'l not have his booke there is not the least tender of grace to the soule whilst convictions are strangled but treasuring up wrath against the day of wrath to burne hornets in their nest seeing they will not come out convictions stifled is like Powder in a mine that when sprung it blowes up all and no fire so terrible as this stifled fire for renting and tearing the soule A mans soule discovered by truth God hath found out the man the effect will be this the man will now prove a deare friend or a desperate enemy to Christ the vision
great world over all the little world into every roome of the soule into joynts and marrow and set downe himselfe where he will in conscience in affection in what inward part he sees good in some one part or in all parts that is the greatest good in the world when truth is in the inward parts i. not in one faculty but in all not onely in the understanding but in the conscience in the affection in every faculty this Christ loves mightily and what hee loves hee can accomplish there is no torture upon him affection larger then power as t is usually with us All power is given to him to worke without to worke within in Earth in Heaven that is in the more internall and heavenly part Hee giveth wisdome to the heart I will give my Lawes into your mind By Lawes is meant all grace and yet all this made a gift and given into the soule that desires it Christ gives things into the hand yea into the heart all precious things and derives them into all parts and when all this is done in us and the like laboured for to be done by us in all others then is internall operation in power or then Christ workes in us mightily which terme pointing onely at a gradation in the same operation hath raveld out it selfe according to what is difficult in unfolding the former A concluding Speech WHich worketh in me mightily The concurrence of this power wee have had in our measure all along our labour which I would should be much acknowledged to Christ by vertue of which wee are now come to our period of this Verse and of the whole Chapter Our pace in this long journey hath been slow that you might all goe along with mee in the well understanding and imbracing of weighty things and yet how many notwithstanding our double industry are left behind in the blindnesse and mis-beliefe of their soules I know not If our Gospell be hid after all pains fully to lay it open such soules have great reason to feare themselves Child-bearing is no easie worke to any but doubly hard to some so that life out of death may that which comes forth betweene the legges be called This birth though but a hard-favoured child hath beene hard travell to us 'tas made many a sigh and groane many a heart pang and crying out to God What you will doe with the child now borne whither you will be a Pharaoh or a Pharoahs Daughter to it murther it or keepe it alive in your hearts I know not This I know that no man can spill all the blood of any child of God some will stick upon you doe what you can to tell the murtherer at the great day Sighes and groanes are the teares of the heart the heart venting it selfe at the mouth when it cannot at the eyes and other lesser pores every drop that hath fallen from our heart and head from our Eye-lids or Eye-brows shall be all gathered up and put as marginall notes along by all our labours and all put in one Volumne together and this volumne put in your hand at the great day and opened Leafe after Leafe and read distinctly and exactly to you and your soules made to attend regard and remember better then here many of you have done and when all is thus read over this booke shall be closed and this question solemnly put to you all now O soules what have you profitted by all Words Prayers Teares Sighes Groanes As Conscience can answer to this for nothing else may then speake so shall your sentence be and I shall be called out to give witnesse to the justice of it and say Amen Lord Jesus righteous is all that thou hast pronounced upon these soules Our labours lost if this were simply all truly 't were nothing but our labours lost and your soules are lost and yet what is losse to you shall be gaine to us for wee are a sweete savour to God both in them that are saved and in them that perish As wee dresse and as wee water Trees in the Lords Vinyard so shall wee have our wages and not as these Trees beare if Trees be dressed and watered well though they never beare well wee shall have a good Vintage You Londoners are Trees watered choisely indeede 'T is storied of the Plane Tree that at its first transplanting into Italie 't was watered with Wine to make it take and prosper in those parts of the World you are Trees watered with Wine I cannot say that you have beene so watered by mee I dare not but this I can humbly and truly say that if our choisest strength and spirits may bee nam'd in steade of Water Wine or if the blessing which hath gone along with these Waters at any time have turned them into Wine in vigour upon your soules then hath God by mee watered your Rootes with Wine and yet if after such costly watering you grow not nor beare not certainly such Trees are neere unto cursing which sad effect that my Ministey should be an instrument to hasten to this place or to any soule will make mee to continue mourning still in secret for you all and so spend and end my dayes * ⁎ * FINIS TABLE MAn is in soule misery page 1 So naturally judicially universally p. 2 3 Whether sensible of soule misery moved and what demonstrates insensibility p. 3 4 5 Christ snatcheth soules out of Hell P. 7 Christ moves swiftly throughly preventingly ravishingly to save p. 7 8 9 Whom Christ hath snatcht out of Satans power p. 10 11 12 That power which workes irresistibly to save the soule with much ease can save our body p. 13 Ignorance makes prophanenesse p. 14 Ignorance pollutes will the practicke understanding the conscience and is the Divels element p. 15 16 The darke Church of England spoken to p. 16 17 Christ carries soules to Heaven p. 18 Christ saves laboriously fatherly surely p. 19 20 Satan carries soules to Hell and how p. 22 23 Demonstrations of Christs Kingdome in this world p. 25 26 Some not far from the Kingdome of God and yet never come there p. 30 31 Love gives forth preferment to all Gods children p. 32 God gives orderly purely solacingly p. 32 33 The folly of men that looke after humane favour to rise p. 34 35 The blessednesse of them which are beloved of God p. 36 37 What redemption meanes p. 38 39 40 41 Bodily bondage lookt after but not soule bondage p. 42 43 What a spirit of bondage and a state of bondage are p. 43 44 What men in bondage and those which are out of bondage should doe p. 45 46 The choicest mercies come through the greatest miseries p. 47 48 Grounds to give God the glory of his way let it be how t will p. 50 51 52 53 Great things comming to us in way of hardship exhorted to prepare for hardship p. 54 What sin meanes p. 55 56 What reconciliation notes p. 56 57 What